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THE

TYRO'S GREEK AND ENGLISH


LEXICON;
OR,

A COMPENDIUM IN ENGLISH
OF THE

CELEBRATED LEXICONS
OF

DAMM, STURZE, SCHLEUSNER, SCHWEIGKUEUSER


COMPREHENDING A CONCISE YET FULL AND ACCURATE EXPLANATION
OF ALL THE WORDS OCCURRING IN THOSE WORKS WHICH,
FOR THEIR SUPERIOR PURITY AND ELEGANCE,
ARE READ IN SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES.

TO WHICH IS ADDED,
AN APPENDIX,
CONTAINING SOME OMISSIONS, AND AN ANALYSIS OF THE MORE
DIFFICULT
AND IRREGULAR WORDS ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED.

By JOHN JONES, LL.D.

, esv '/.
SECOND EDITION.

:
PRINTED FOR
LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, BROWN, AND GREEN,
PATERNOSTER-ROW.

1825.
Dt ^ <

i^

LONDON:
PRINTED BY RICHARD TAYLOR, SHOE LANE.
PREFACE.
v^

AS this Lexicon does not profess to contain all the words in the Greek language,
it is necessary to specify those writers in verse and prose which it comprehends.
These are the Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, Pindar, Theocritus, Anacreon, Bion,
Moschus, the plays of iEschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, and Aristophanes, together
with the selections of the Anthologia, published for the use of Eton and West-
minster schools, and in Dalzel's Collectanea Majora. The prose authors explained
in this work, are Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon, Demosthenes, with the po-
3 to which are added the New
pular pieces of Plato, Aristotle, and Theophrastus
Testament and Longinus. As the work is intended for learners, I have for the
most part excluded such words as are peculiar to Hesiod, Lycophron, Apollonius
Rhodius, to Polybius, Lucian, Plutarch, and the Septuagint, as unnecessary to
those who read authors only for the sake of learning the language.
Afterhad finished printing my Lexicon in its present state, I thought it right
I

to reperuse the works which it has been my object to explain. This for the most
part Iaccomplished in the course of six months, marking with a pencil such words
as I had overlooked or imperfectly explained 3 and these I afterwards collected
and alphabetically arranged, with the more difficult or irregular branches of verbs,
inan Appendix. The learner will find the omissions thus supplied very consi-
derable and though the task was most irksome, I rejoice that I submitted to it,
.3

as I thus hope to render the book less imperfect and objectionable. Accordingly,
the scholar, if he be disappointed in the body of the work, is requested to con-
sult the Appendix, which in many instances at least cannot fail to remove his
difficulty.

In order to enable the reader to judge how far my labours merit his patronage,
I shall in the first place briefly point out the features which distinguish this Lexicon,
and the advantages which it holds out to the public.
1 Be it then remembered, that it is intended solely for learners of the Greek
.

language, whether in school, at college, or in their private studies. With this


view, I endeavoured in the composition to unite both brevity and comprehension ;

to be full without redundancy to be concise with as little defect and obscurity as


3

possible. On one hand, I wished to omit no word to which a learner, however ex-
tensive his course of reading may be, might have occasion to turn 3 while on the
other, avoided to swell the work with words that are unnecessary in a manual,
I

as occurring only in authors not likely to be in the


hands of a mere student in Greek.
Though not disposed to undervalue the bounty of Providence, I am too deeply
impressed with the mediocrity of my own talents to be vain 01• presumptuous.
iv PREFACE.
Yet I hesitate not to say, that I have missed my aim and my labour, if these pages
fail to recommend themselves by justness and brevity of interpretation, originality
of thought, and aptitude of illustration, and to spread for the public entertainment
a voluminous mass of useful matter in a form the most compendious, tangible,
and convenient.
2. The words are arranged alphabetically, except that in a cluster of derived

words the parent term is put at the head, either in capitals, or more generally
with an initial capital, and the rest follow, in the order of their derivation, with a
small letter. This is the only notice given of the etymology of derived terms ;

and this order, while it causes little or no difficulty in finding a word, spared some
trouble, and often saved nearly a whole line. If the parent word be at some di-
stance from its proper place, it is again repeated, or the column specified, in the
Appendix.
3. In explaining those simple terms which have ramified into secondary serises,
I have always fixed on what I deemed the primary signification : but as this work
is intended only for learners, who generally have little relish for etymologies, I

have for the most part avoided all reference to the Oriental languages. A true
and correct system of etymology, indeed, is absolutely necessary in a philosophical
Lexicon -, for etymology furnishes the only true means of ascertaining the pri-
mary sense of a term : and when this sense, like the root of a tree, is found, its

ramification into secondary senses is easily pursued ; the principle of connexion


between them is discovered ; and the memory, instead of being overloaded! and per-
plexed with different and discordant significations, is conducted through an easy-
and agreeable variety, all springing from, and connected with, a commdn stem.
4. In tracing the secondary senses from the primary, the same original idea is

generally preserved through the several ramifications. It is a common notion that


many words in all languages convey a variety of significations. But m strict pro-
priety a term has but one sense, or at most but two —a literal, and an analogical
sense. Every word on every occasion presents the same idea ; and it conveys dif-

ferent ideas, only because it stands in different connexions. Yet, oTerlooking the
primary sense of a term, and the peculiarity of its context, Lexicographers ascribe
to the word itself what it owes to accidental associations. Hence they frequently
fall into the double error, of distinguishing on one hand the senses of a word, when
in reality there is no and of annexing to it on the other a sense
difference of sense,
that belongs to anotherword in the sentence. Damm, Sturze,, Schleusner, and
Schweighaeuser, though the most accurate and the most learned of all Lexicogra-
phers, are continually chargeable with this twofold error, especially in explain-
ing the prepositions and particles. The only correct and adequate way, therefore,
of interpreting a word, is in every step to preserve its original power, and to quote
at least a part of the context. This 1 have generally done in italics, and then ex-
pressed the word and its context by one equivalent term in English.
5. The simple verbs, from their importance as elements of compounds, and
as stems of various branches, required and have obtained a more ample and
elaborate explanation than other words. These branches, depending on the va-
riations of mood, tense, number and person, especially if modified by poetic license
PREFACE.
or peculiarities of dialect, are often specified : but instead of being scattered al-
phabetically along the body of the work, as in the common school Lexicons, they
are collected under their respective stems j and the learner, where he feels any
difficulty, must have recourse to the Appendix. Damm, Sturze, Schleusner, and
Schweighseuser, have adopted the same plan, as essential to a rational system of
Lexicography and herein it is that I owe my great obligations to these learned in-
:

terpreters. They have brought under one view the numerous and diversified ap-
plications of the same word in the authors which they profess to explain ; and
lough, not without due respect for their authority, I interpreted each term in my
wn way, they thus enabled me to incorporate in this Lexicon the sum and sub-
tance of their labours, and to present it to the public as a compendium of their
mmortal works.
6. Most words, and in general their distinct senses, are justified by references
.0 the original authors. This indeed was a laborious task j but it was a task fully

compensated by its utility. A Lexicographer, in explaining the words of a dead


anguage, can expect little weight or authority unless he appeal to those writers
«vhose words he explains. The description of a term abstracted from its appli-
cation must necessarily be vague ; and a view of it in the context alone can de-
ine and fix it in the memory. Besides, the author of a large work will be often
bund through haste, weariness, or negligence, to be too general or incorrect, or
even mistaken, in his interpretation ; and in every doubtful case, a reference to
the original will enable the reader not only to satisfy himself as to the sense, but
also to supply what is defective, and correct what may be erroneous, in the de-

finition.

7. Greece consisted of provinces, in many respects independent one of another.


Each of these had its own standard of excellence in language, as in laws and in-
stitutions. Hence the same simple verb was split into distinct stems, or had stems

of different origin but of the same import, which became current in different places
or at different periods

,
branches peculiar to each.
<?, ;
; and out of which, by the same general analogy, grew
Thus
had and
(which was originally
j had ,)— had also
and so on
,in a
multitude of other verbs. Many of these stems in progress of time became obso-
lete, while the branches which grew out of them were engrafted on the only sur-
viving stem, and formed with it one large — irregular indeed, but united — family.
Now in this Lexicon the several branches of verbs are uniformly classed under
their respective stems ; and not, as has been usual with Lexicographers, under
the roots used in the common tongue, and with which they have been amalgamated
only by vulgar usage.
8. The doubtful syllable in the explained word is marked as long or short. The
accents, on the contrary, I have entirely omitted, as defacing the native simplicity
of the language, and as requiring much sacrifice of expense and labour, without
bringing in return the smallest advantage to the learner. I am happy to think

that I am sanctioned in this omission by the example of Morel and Dr. Maltby,
who retain only the circumflex, which also have done.
9. The passive form of a verb in Greek, — as is the case, though less frequently, in
vi PRE F A C E.

Latin, —-expresses a reflex as well as a passive sense ; and it was through inattention

to this double power of a passive verb that grammarians were led to feign the ex-
istence of a middle voice. This, however, is an idle distinction that I shall en-
tirely dissipate in my Analogic Grcecce. I have, therefore, throughout this Lexicon
annexed to the passive voice the reflex sense, as a sense inherent in it, and most
appropriate to it. Sturze, whose admirable Lexicon has conferred great benefit
on Greek literature, pursued an opposite course. On every occasion he expresses
the middle voice distinctly from the other two, while he classes the passive under
the active voice j thus widening rather than correcting the common error, which
supposes the passive and the middle to be two distinct forms.
10. Though a dictionary of a limited extent is not the place for critical discus-

sion, yet, on many obscure or mistaken passages in the writers whom I profess to
explain, I have attempted to throw some new light, without always noticing the
opinions or errors of other critics.

11. Particular care has been taken in explaining the particles and prepositions.
Some of the former have been placed in a new light, while, amidst the various
senses under which the latter are applied, their strict and peculiar meaning
stated,
,, KxTcCy &c.
and then preserved in their various applications. See , is first

,, av,&c.
1 2. In the Appendix will be found many words that have been overlooked during
the progress of the work : some are again repeated which have been imperfectly
explained ; and to facilitate the progress of learners, a copious vocabulary of the
different branches of verbs, especially irregular verbs, is collected in alphabetical
order.
13. Moreover, work a few promiscuous observations calculated to
I prefix to the

assist beginners in investigating the themes, or in ascertaining the


stems of words
as they are arranged in the Lexicon, in order to do this the more effectually, 1
notice as I proceed the changes peculiar to each dialect. These remarks will be
found most useful to young learners, as calculated to enable them with little practice
toknow the root to which they must refer any word, however irregular, that may occur
in their way. This method will teach the pupil to become his own master, and
to scorn the paltry aid which renders Schrevelius and even Hederic at present so
acceptable to the generality of scholars. The custom of knowing the case of a
noun, or the mood and tense of a verb, by turning them in agrammar or dictio-
nary, is a reflection on the teachers in our private and public schools, and forms
one of many cogent reasons why the above-mentioned popular Lexicons should
be consigned to oblivion, as the bane of that noble language, to the knowledge of
which they pretend to be guides. The first object of every rational instructor
should be to render his pupils independent of himself or of a Lexicon, in regard to
the mechanism of the language j to enable them, by an exact knowledge of the
models, to follow up any given word from its root along the several branches ;

and in a reverse order to descend from the branches to their common stem and :

this can be done only by general principles, addressed not to the memory only, but
also to the understanding, as comprehending whole classes of words.
Finally, Though this Lexicon I fondly hope possesses such excellence as may
PREFACE. Vll

entitle it to the notice and patronage of the public, I am sufficiently sensible


of its errors and imperfections. In extenuation of the omissions and mistakes that
may occasionally deface it, I would plead, the liability to err and to fail incidental to
our common nature the general character of usefulness and novelty that pervades
:

the book and the utter impossibility by any human efforts to produce a correct and
j

perfect work on a subject so extensive and difficult as the Greek language. If the

public voice approve of it in the main, no pains shall be spared in the rcvisal and
further improvement of it : the suggestions of enlightened criticism will be thank-
fully attended to, redundancy wherever discovered retrenched, and defects supplied,
so as to meet the wishes and exigencies of the humblest learner.

The Principles of Lexicography unfolded and illustrated.

A Lexicon, to be really excellent and deserving of general reception, cannot be


composed by imitation from other Lexicons. The author should be a man of great
industry, real learning, and original powers of thought possessing not only a full
and accurate knowledge of the inflexions of words, the rules of construction, and
the canons of criticism ; but also an extensive acquaintance with the writers of
Greece, having remarked the excellencies which they have in common, and the pe-
culiarities of style or dialect which may distinguish them. Nor should he be un-
acquainted with the researches or discoveries of others; but have recourse to those
critics or Lexicographers whose learned industry may abridge his own labours or
furnish him on some difficult points with useful information.
But the province of a Lexicographer is the language, not the compositions of '

Greece. This he will consider as one immense whole ; and his object is to give
an analysis of it in all its parts. If he pursue this analysis in a philosophical
manner, his first object will be to divide the language into two classes — primitive
words, and derived words. The first class, which forms the basis or elements of
Greek, comprehends its roots, these being comparatively few in number j the
other embraces its numerous branches, which constitute its vast bulk. Having
thus found each stem, he will pursue it through its several ramifications, noting
every branch till he has traced and collected all them
the branches, and then class
under a common root. The analogies by which the derived proceed from the
parent terms are various and extensive, but at the same time regular and uni-
form. The deveiopement of these will be an important object with the philoso-
phical Lexicographer : the knowledge of such analogies cannot fail to give him a
mighty command over the language ; as it will enable him to determine the sense
of each compound or derived term, by disclosing its relation to some common parent
of a numerous family. Many words also which at first appear solitary, or foreign
intruders on the simplicity and order of the language, may by such deveiopement
claim their rank as native and legitimate members of its community. In a word,
this method of analysis raises the inquirer to an eminence, whence he beholds
every stem growing up and spreading into a vast tree, and all these trees forming a
viii PREFACE.
luxuriant forest of immense extent and every variety, from the oak, the monarch
of the grove, to the humblest shrub that clothes and diversifies the surface of the
ground.
His next object will be a move remote and still more difficult inquiry —the in-
vestigation of the roots themselves. These did not grow up like plants from the
soil of Greece, or like the armed host fabulously said to have sprung from the
teeth of the serpent :
—they rather point for their origin to languages anterior to
the Greek, and more ancient ; such as the Hebrew with its several dialects,
still

the Chaldean, Syriac, Arabic and Ethiopic —


the Shanscreet, the Palevi, or ancient
Persian. These are the only soils where the roots of Greek terms have been dug
up ; which being carried away from Egypt and other parts of the East, were thrown
on the coasts of Greece by those tides of emigration which agitated the early ages
of the world. Nor is the man who is altogether unacquainted with these primeval
tongues more able to explain the sense of a primitive word in Greek, than a
writer would be to explain the primitive words in English who is an entire stranger
to the Gothic and Saxon, which are confessedly the parent tongues. The ancient
Lexicographers and Scholiasts, doubtless, point out the true origin of many words 5
the theories of Damm, Hemsterhuse, Lennep and Schneider, contain beyond doubt
much solid matter, unfold many just and beautiful analogies : but a great portion
of their etymologies is a heap of rubbish, which enlightened criticism and an ade-
quate knowledge of the Oriental languages cannot fail to scatter on the wind.
No inquiries are generally deemed more uncertain, unprofitable, or uninteresting,
than those of etymology. The principal reason is, that men of partial views on
the subject of language generally engage in these inquiries, who follow no other
rule than their own fancies, and whose conjectures are at variance with those of
others. If ever the time should come when the etymological inquirer is guided by
the same rules which Newton introduced into natural philosophy, — when no deri-
vation shall be admitted as probable or just, but what is the result of induction ;

but what is conformable to a fixed standard -, but what is warranted in every


doubtful case by numerous instances of the same kind already known and allowed
to be true ;
—then researches into the origin and derivation of language will be
deemed most necessary and important as intimately connected with the history
;

of man, with the truth of divine revelation, and with the knowledge and conse-
quent improvement of the human mind. For language, as a system of articulate
sounds, is the creature not of the tongue or the lips, but of the understanding.
While speech is employed as a medium of communication, it spreads a canvass on
which the mind paints its own image in delicate but permanent colours, and in
the study of which it becomes a subject of contemplation and discovery to itself.
If a radical verb in Greek resemble a Hebrew verb, as having the same number

of syllables, as similar in sound, and moreover as conveying either the same


sense or a sense obviously derived from it, — it must appear probable that the former
is derived from the latter. If withal the Hebrew verb bear a meaning obviously
capable of ramifying into all the secondary senses borne by the Greek verb, it is

morally certain that the Greek term is the offspring of that in Hebrew. I will illus-

trate this by a few examples. In Hebrew, (awe or ave) means to desire. Hence

PREFACE; ix

the Latin aveo, whichis the same in sound and sense. In Greek we meet with &&u),

or as was doubtless pronounced


it ,,
and I maintain that this is another form ;

of the same Hebrew verb and though it does not precisely convey the same idea,
:

yet it conveys an idea that immediately flows from it; for the natural consequence
of desire is to be deceived, to be blinded, or involved in calamity ; and this is the
exact meaning of the Greek verb. The Hebrew corresponding noun is (awe)*
or in regimine m» (awat) and under this form it exists in Greek ,,),
;

term in that language appears more vague or more varied in its signification than
No .
but take it, as the Hebrew suggests, to mean desire, and all its various senses
;

are reducible to perfect order. For desire, in contradistinction to reason, may


denote envy, malignity, or hatred, —a sense which it bears in Herod. 6. 61 j though
Schweighseuser, being probably not aware of the primary signification, has there
changed anj into ,. The effect of eager desire on the understanding is infa-
tuation, folly, or blindness
of guilt
to satiate.
is calamity, suffering, death.
But whatever satiates, takes away desire and
; the effect of

if derived from
Further
it on the heart
still, Damm
j
is guilt

,
derives
; the consequence
from ,
this source, would mean satiated, or no longer desirous, as having had enough :

but this is a sense the very reverse of the term and therefore Damm, in direct 3

opposition to his own etymology, renders it nunquam satiatus. Now refer the
word to clclm or ,,
or together with these refer it to the Hebrew verb, and its

, meaning
primary appropriate sense would be desirous ; and
Homer, as /,
a bridge, is
eager for war,
derived by Damm
II. v.

from
746".

< and
this is its

;
exact

he adds, " quia ex


in

its

liast
origin to be ,
terra in terrain ducit viatorem." Schneider improves on this idle conceit by
' land upon the water.
on Pindar, Nem. 6.64: which only proves that this celebrated Lexicographer
This he takes from the Scho-
making

knew no more of the origin of the language which he undertook to explain, than
a monk in the dark ages. Now I affirm that the true source of the term is the
Hebrew (caphar), which means to secure against water by covering. The term
is used by Moses, when Noah secured the ark against the flood by covering it with

pitch. Hence means to dam, or to afford a safe passage over a stream ;


that is, to form a bridge. The word exists also under the form but this ;

has a very different sense, and the difference renders its derivation from the He-
brew term morally certain for that signifies to cover with pitch. To cover a

Again, Damm
is,

derives
;

person with pitch, (or, as we should say, to pitch and tar him,) is to treat him with
indignity, that to abuse or vilify, which
from ,
is the signification of the Greek
unwise. But this is
.
very wide
of the origin
of Agamemnon,
and true sense

abject in the eyes of the Greeks.


ils
of the term.

The sense and sound


,
Homer, II.

he
. 643, makes
made me most mean or
word concur in re-
of the
Achilles say

ferring its real source to the Arabic VfiNttfK (asapheel), the lowest or meanest; of
which word the root is the Hebrew btffl (saphal), to humble or demean.

,
whom
Homer, . . 813, says
while the immortals call
are Damm
that

and Schneider, consider


" men
it the
call the

tomb of Myrinne."
tumulus or mount before Troy Ba-

this as a proper
Lexicographers,
name of the mount, so
among

b
x PREFACE.
called from the Amazon buried there. Troy, as being in Asia Minor, must for
the most part have been inhabited by people who spoke the Asiatic languages.

«Vin (batia), is the Chaldean form of the Hebrew TO (beeth), house, home, or the
grave, the last The word then expresses in Chaldean the same
home of man.
thing which is expressed in Greek by " the tomb of Myrinne." Hence we dis-
cover the origin of a phrase which is not unfrequent in Homer, to be that spirit of
pride and conscious superiority which actuated the poet, as one who used the im-
mortal language of Greece. " It is called
it is called ,.
by men, but ,.
by the gods;
in the vulgar dialect of Troy, but ar^a in the polished lan-
.
guage of the Greeks."
The Greeks in common with other nations hated and ridiculed the Hebrews, as
claiming privileges beyond the rest of mankind ; and this feeling in some cases
seems to have influenced them in the use of the terms which they derived from
the Hebrew tongue. Thus Homer, who had been in Egypt, where the writings
of the Jewish legislator were wellknown, burlesques the circumcision which God
enjoined on Abraham as the symbol of moral purity. The poet borrows the very
word nViD (mole), and feigns it to be a bulbous plant given by Mercury to Ulysses
to preserve him from the debaucheries of Circe. Compare Od. . 308. with Gen.
17. 23.
The chaotic mass which existed before the world was brought into order by the
Almighty.,
123.
darkness.
is

This,
personified by the
The term they use is

by dropping the
, Greek poets, as we
which apparently
final consonant, becomes Wn,
find in the
is the Hebrew
Theog. of Hesiod,

,
, -, *\V)T\

or Mttfn
(hhask),

or -,
to be silent. Hence our verb
to be still
to hush,

or nlent. The
and the Celtic
title ()
moles," the Greeks sometimes use as an epithet to signify ancient, awful, noble, good,
hist,

of this
and the Greek
" rudis indigestaque

seemingly in opposition to or in ridicule of that Being who said, " Let there be
light, and there was
light." The following fact confirms and illustrates this re-

name
mark.
changed into ,
The Jews worshiped Jehovah under the
an ass; and hence the origin of the calumny repeated even by
6
of : this their enemies

,
Tacitus, that the Jews worshiped an ass in the temple of Jerusalem.
The Israelites called their law
Hence the Greeks have derived
fruitless ;
iTttflfi (tuseie),

and given
which also means wisdom or
it

doubtless in derision of the Mosaic law, which was most useful and be-
the sense of vain, senseless, or
virtue.

wet. , ,
neficial, as teaching moral purity and true wisdom, and professing to have
from the inspiration of God. Damm most absurdly derives
which the same great Lexicographer deduces from
vain, vado,
from hw,
,
come
to be

to go, is

Nor were

selves.
another form of

Ekronites. 4 Reg. 1.2.


between 2\
the

the former for the latter.


(zabub), a
, ,
and points to the same origin in Hebrew.
Hebrews behind-hand with the Greeks
equal point, and with^more justice and truth, retorted their taunts upon them-
Thus IXDfcjD,
The
lord of flies, was the name

and Vdt (zabul), dung, changed by way of contempt


fly,
Hence we read lord of dung. Luke 1 1 15.
in this respect,

of an idol
Hellenistic Jews, availing themselves of the similarity
who with

among the

The pagans applied the Hebrew ?


{ala), which designated the God of Israel, to
.
PREFACE xl

theirown idols, under the form ol t3»M>K (alilim). The singular of this in Hebrew
'

means also nothing, nihilum. To this ambiguity the apostle alludes, 1 Cor. 8. 4,
where he says, " We know that an idol is nothing in the world," i. e. we who use
the Hebrew tongue, in which the term that means idol means also nothing.
The Greeks transformed Nimrod, celebrated as a famous hunter by Moses, into
Orion, whom after his death they changed into a star, and gave him, it should seem,
this name, as moving with grace and rapidity— ,, . In contempt of
this folly, the Hebrew writers called him 2D2 (kasal), the star of sluggishness arid
stupidity, Job 28. 31. Is. 13. 10.

But to return to the subject. —The primary sense of a term when ascertained by
its derivation will be found liable to vary, and to appear under different forms in
different connexions. These variations proceed from two great causes : one ope-
rating immediately on the human mind, and governing the moral world with the
same invariableness and universality with which gravitation governs the natural ;

I mean the association of ideas. On this great law all the phenomena of speech
depend -
}
nor can a Lexicographer become acquainted with the nature and pro-
perties of the language which he professes to expound, without being thoroughly
acquainted with its operations. The other cause is more remote, and operates on
the mind so as to modify language only through the medium of association ; I

mean the principle of connexion, which is the immediate cause of association itself.

This principle in many cases is universal, and arises from the necessary order of
things. Its effects, through the influence of association, are uniformly the same in
all languages. Thus in all times and places a cause is connected with its effect t
an author with his works ; means with their end and materials with the instru-
j

ments made out of them. As this connexion necessarily subsists, association uni-
formly operates j and the consequence is, that a cause often lends its own name to
the effect, an author designates his works, instruments are called from their mate-
rials ; and this in all countries without exception.
There are other causes of connexion which are more variable, and I may say,
accidental : these are juxtaposition, proximity, contiguity in time and place, ana-
logy, and contrast. Wherever and whenever a connexion between two or more
ideas is continued for a time, or repeated so as to become familiar, there associa-
tion causes a new combination —causes new changes in themeaning of words, or
a new transfer of words from one object to another. But the law of association
in combining our ideas, does not as it were stop to inquire whether those ideas
have any affinity or connexion in the nature of things. We know from experience,
that when ideas the most dissimilar in themselves or foreign to each other are
brought together so as habitually to dwell in the mind, they soon acquire the
closest union, and mutually communicate their own names. The circumstances
in the education of a people which give birth to such connexions are very various
and fluctuating; and however remote or difficult may be the knowledge of them,
they must be objects of attention and study to the Lexicographer. In respect to
the Greeks, the sources of these combinations are to be sought, through the me-
dium of history, in the genius and character of that people. The forms of their go-

vernment their modes of assembling, deliberating, andadministeringjustice their —
b2
— —
xii PREFACE.
civil and political institutions — their philosophy, superstition, and mythology—
their solemn festivals and public games — the state of the arts, commerce, and agri-
culture — their style of architecture and dress — their habits domestic and social

even the general appearance of the country, and the influence of climate peculiar
to them, — all these are powerful causes, which affected their language, which caused
combinations and peculiarities must remain unknown or mistaken, till their
in it that

nfluence on the mind, through the medium of association, be observed and analysed.

made
I will illustrate

,
wealth from commerce.
from
Orestes 1076,
to sail

6
these

,
,
general remarks by a few examples. The Athenians had
great progress in navigation, and, like the English, derived most of their
Hence the very word denoting riches, came
and hence too the propriety of the phrase used by Euripides,
a great harbour of wealth, for great wealth.
The soil of Attica is known to have been shallow and barren (Thuc. 1.2.), and
its shores precipitous and craggy : accordingly most of the names in Greek which

, ,, ,
mean a beach or shore, convey something broken, rugged, or tempestuous.

, Thus

earth

,
;
a shore (from broken, and this from
a place where the waves break, or as
has the same meaning, and from the same source.
a tempest or agitation of the sea.
we
,
to break),

say a breaker, from


means broken

a beach,
j

is

,
,
single, while evil is manifold.
ro

then quotes a line from an ancient poet,


,<
was a maxim with the philosophers, that good,, of whatever kind, is one or
It

Thus Aristotle (Ethic. Nicom. lib. 2. 6.) writes, ro

, ,
evil is infinite,

men are good in one, evil in various ways. On this principle it is that
rectitude is one. He
$

,
which in strictness means one, or simple, may also mean good, pure, or in a sound
state. See Matt. 6. 22.

denotes crafty, or cunning. -,


The opposite of this in Latin is duplex, which sometimes
the abstract of signifies singleness

,
of heart, honesty. Seemingly to the prevalence of this notion it is owing, that
which signifies to mix, signifies also to corrupt or pollute. The Hebrew btt

the Greeks express by ,


(capal), to fold, double, join, gave birth to the Latin copulo, to pair, copulate, which

-
,
misceo, to mix seeds. In Arabic and Ethiopic this
one who carves or

,
verb means to dispense, distribute, as sells meat : hence
;,

,,
an innkeeper or victualler. The practice of this trafficker in adulterating
wines and other
means
into
this

meet
we have
,
&,
or
articles of food

to corrupt or adulterate.

also in Aristotle (Rhet. 3. 14.


was proverbial
By
adulterated, and
vulgar use

unadulterated, pure, and


i J .) with
,
;

,,
and

to
in consequence,
degenerated
mix or adulterate. From
without alloy.
one who makes up or
We
mixes on the spur of the occasion something for his own use rude, gross, inelegant.
Suidas says that this epithet is properly applied to flour that
is mixed for bread
;

,
sort of corn measure among the Hebrews.
form of hence ra
The terms by which
: cheats. ,
and Schneider, with little resemblance in sound or sense, derives it from

the firmament is
,, a
a knave, is another corrupted

expressed in Greek and in Latin exhibit a


remarkable instance of the influence of philosophical opinion on language. Early
PREFACE. xiii

in the second century an Egyptian philosopher taught that the firmament or heaven
consisted of solid orbs, each star being supposed to be fixed in a solid transparent
sphere like crystal. This notion was doubtless not new ; it had prevailed in Egypt
ages before, though from Ptolemy
doubt
It is
first systematically taught
from the prevalence of
in Latin,

firm and solid.


came to
this
it — it

opinion that
be applied to the heavens, though these nouns imply something
Hence, too, the epithets
~
— who, with some additions or modifications, no
went by the name of the Ptolemaic system.

, \&\ in Greek, and firmamentum

, and the like,

used by Homer and other poets, to characterize the heavens.


Words, like garments, are liable to be worn out and changed by long-continued
use, and Lexicographers have not been sufficiently careful to trace the changes

-,
which thev have undergone thus instead of considering
Schneider derives it from
: a corruption of
a word I believe not known in the , ,
Greek language.
to

or ,
We have
draw, attract, which by transposition becomes
or in Latin ipse.
another very remarkable instance, in the verb

The derived
,
verb, both simple
«;, just
and compound,
as < becomes
retains
the exact sense of its original : thus Sophocles, Trach. 678, makes Deianeira say

,
that the wool infected with the corrosive poison wriggled over the slab on which
it

,,
was placed, and disappeared
withdrew itself, " wriggled away over the extremity of the
again expressed in line 700
perf. pass, of in
:
: }

a reflex sense, rubbed


, ^ itself,
slab."
—^,

" frittered
for

The same
— ^,,
away
idea

to the
is

,
ground." The following critique of Brunck
significante
hoc verbo duo sunt observanda
fit

:
}/<, , is therefore altogether groundless
et abjecto augmento
primo formam esse poeticam, qua tragici raris-
, ^, ".
:
" A
In

sime in senariis utuntur ; turn formam esse activam significatione passiva, quod
poeta ipse v. 700. declarat."
Herodotus, 1. 189, uses the compound of a stream which swept away
a horse that had rashly plunged into it. Schweighaeuser, though he endeavours to
explain the word on the authority of Valla, Henr. Stephen, and Schneider, thus
—" Quid vero
candidly acknowledges
voluerit Herodotus,

.
vanished, or rather never have been
another form of
There exists no word
haud
:

satis in liquidoest."

in the
felt, if
sit potissimum quod verbo hoc significatum
The difficulty would have immediately
he had been aware that

Greek language which causes so much perplexity to


< is but

learners, and to which critics have assigned so many meanings and such unaccount-
able powers, as the particle av.
from the imperative of
it granted, or this granted.
, This
Lennep
to suffer, grant,

is
derives it from
and he assigns
;

an attempt to apply to the Greek the theory of


and Professor Dunbar
to it the sense of be

Home Tooke in English, and might be deemed just and true, if a more rational
account of the particle could not be given. The real origin of av, then,
initial being dropped. In many places av is known to have the sense of
is ,
,
the

if;
and I propose to show that this is its meaning, and only meaning, iu every place
whatever : the sense of posse, vellc, debere, fulurum esse, given it by Hoogeveen

PREFACE.

5
,
,
and

Here
,, ,
others, being altogether foreign to
firm the truth of this assertion.

,
Demosthenes in the

occurs three times


beginning of his

; and
-
if we pass
it.

first
A few examples will illustrate and con-

over
Philippic thus writes

it, the passage would be literally


:

-
.
thus : f If it was proposed, men of Athens, to speak on any new subject, re-
straining myself till our usual speakers expressed their sentiments, if indeed any
of those things said pleased me, I held my tongue 3 if not, then I attempted to
speak." Here a condition is beginning of the sentence, If it was
laid down in the

proposed, &c. ; and a proposition results from it, which, though not unconditonal yet
certain, is put in the indicative, " I held my tongue — if not, I too attempted to
speak." This is the most correct and philosophical way that the orator could have
adopted to express his meaning. What is the use, or what is the sense, then, of
av 5 I answer, It is used, and it is repeated, to remind the reader that his holding
his tongue or his attempting to speak were not absolute, but depended on a con-
dition. Thus, tc
if any of those things said by them pleased me av, if so on —
that condition, I held my tongue —but if not — if none of them did please me — if

so —on that condition, I too attempted to speak."

that
Why
It is well

it

then
is
known

is it inserted at
that av is

all
often omitted
necessary neither to the sense nor the legitimacy of the construction.
?

beginning of the second clause, as an admonition to the reader to carry with him
,
It is inserted after
; and it

,
appears from this explanation

immediately in the

the supposition implied in the first word he uttered ; and as


a considerable distance from the close of the sentence, or
repeats it before the verb ; thus preventing the condition from being forgotten, and
its

,
insertion is

he again
at

at the same time rendering it more prominent and emphatic. This explanation,

,
as with a flash of light, dissipates the mystery in which the origin and import of
av have been involved, and leads to its true meaning on every occasion.
Hoogeveen
optative.
says, that the most frequent use of av
This force he illustrates from Aristoph. Achar. 313, "
' multas injurias passos
is

'
potential, joined with the

esse illos, ostendere pos-


av airo<prr

sum : ubi actus verbi tollitur per particulam av non enim dicit se osten-
dere, sed posse se ostendere ait." The Chorus had said that the Spartans were the
authors of all the evils which the Athenians endured : Dicaeopolis replies in the
above words :
" If so, I might show many instances of those men (namely, the
Spartans,) being wronged." The speaker first denies that the Spartans were the
authors of all the said evils 3 and next, in the quoted line, by the use of av, con-
cedes it as a fact $
yet extenuates the charge, by saying that the Spartans were in
many respects an injured people, and consequently the Athenians unjust aggres-
sors. Thus, " If they were the authors —suppose or grant they were the authors,
—they were themselves injured and provoked, and the sufferers were visited with
just retaliation." Here it is evident, then, that this learned philologist, overlooking

PREFACE. xv

the real meaning of av, ascribes to a sense which belongs to the mood in which

,
it

the verb
The same
-
is expressed.
error is committed by Brunck, who, on
thus comments :
((
v. 885. of the Plutus,
potentiale cum
'
praesente etiam
indicativi construitur :" accordingly he renders the verse, Sed annulus esse non possit
adversus sycophants morsum. The just man says, " I wear a ring which I bought
of Eudamus." Chremylus replies, " But if so", av —suppose you do, what then
" there is no charm against the bite of un informer."
A very common meaning ascribed by the critics to , isfere,fortasse, soleo.

,
I

refer the reader to Brunck's learned note

sage is as follows
-, : , on v.

AN, which
,
290. of the Philoctetes, which pas-

" Besides
literally is thus :

this, whatever my string-shot arrow might hit — if so myself miserable rolled my-
self distressed — if so, Ismj, dragging my foot towards it j" — if so, that is, if the arrow
brought its victim to the ground. And the use of here, and still more its repe-
tition, implies, that as Philoctetes had only one leg for use, and was in great pain,

his

that
bow might
Brunck
perfect tense
to this particle
,
be,

is

express a future contingent sense


and often did prove

I used to roll
ineffectual.

refers to this particle the sense of soleo, so often implied in the


myself
more surprising than that of causing a verb or a participle to
and this I am free to say is equally unfounded
:
—usually crawled.
And here again it is

No power imputed
evident
im-

with the other powers ascribed to it. Thus Cyrus asks his father " How a person
becomes really wise in things likely to profit him ?"
The father answers, " Whatever things it is
j

possible to know by learning them, should be learnt 3" $~


— literally, " Whatever things it is possible

,
to know, if having learnt."
The last clause is elliptical, and the ellipsis must be filled up from the preceding,
" if having learnt them, he would become wise in them."
A similar ellipsis takes place in all such passages, which are very common. But
the critics and interpreters, overlooking the true sense of the particle, give it a
sense which belongs to other words expressed or implied in the context. See
Xen. Cyrop. 1. 6. 19.
If this doctrine be true, in every instance is independent of the verb which
is found same clause with it, and never modifies its meaning, unless when
in the

,
it obviously stands for

.if I

his
and it is then placed before the verb in the subjunctive

ever find thee here a second time !"


— . ,-•
mood. Thus Charon, finding himself cheated of his fare by Menippus, tells him,

Menippus interrupts him before he closes


sentence, and indignantly repeats his words, " If you find me good sir you
. , !
"Assuredly


never shall find me here a second time." Now maintain that

,,
I is not af-*

fected by j but this particle refers to a clause understood, and is but an index of
that ellipsis. Thus , " if you caught me now here,
you shall not catch me here again ;" or " you shall not catch me
though you desired it." Or it is a repetition of av taken from Charon's lips, " Spare
your if, good sir, you never shall find me here again." The optative mood implies in-
—— —
xvi PREFACE.
its very form the idea of power; such as may, might, as well as that of frisking. Why
then borrow from av what it has in itself, especially when this particle has no such
notion to lend ? Hoogeveen says that divests the verb of its action, and sub-
stitutes the idea posse. Brunck says that it imparts the notion of posse to a verb
in the indicative. According to the former, av converts a participle into a verb,
and gives the indicative the sense of the subjunctive or the optative. Thus
av, has the sense of , and this the conditional meaning " I would have

restrained myself."
- ,
,^,
I must produce one or two examples more. Of rt

Matt. 15.5. Here again it is maintained that


does not modify nor has any connexion with it, but supposes a repetition

,, ,
of that verb, and serves to insinuate a doubt whether any one ever said so, or that
it

$ -,
was strange or unnatural, if he did 6 — ,— —
,
:

" whoever says if any one can be


found to say so — to his father or mother, you are benefited by me, that by which
if

you would be benefited is a gift to the temple —


is consecrated to holy purposes, and

cannot now be appropriated to your relief." remarkable that the Evangelist


here appears to have considered , as I
It is

maintain, to be another form of , and

,,
both to have the same idea ; and Greek would probably produce this very
critics

passage as an instance of the want of Attic purity in the style of the New Testament.

, In an epigram of Epicharmus,
!?
we thus read '
. :

Here again is

points to a verb understood


power to see one man — however
,
put in the optative, in order to express the power peculiar to that mood, while av
or
you may wish or seek
^,, " you cannot have
—nor
it to accost
it in

any one
your

who has no forefathers " av in the second clause supposes repeated, and
,
:

changed to the subjunctive av " for how, if you should see such an one, did
he ever exist."

In the play of Plutus a young man in poverty is represented as selling his person
to a rich old
services.
woman

, ;

, and Chremylus asks her, how much he demanded


She answers, Not much, as he professes uncommon regard

, , ,. , , -
then proceeds to state what was usual with him to ask

crfvAN, ,, '
5'
AN %7 (
for her

Plut. 981
{
for his

; and

— 986.
Here , though connected with and sh^Yj, affects neither the
mood nor the tense of these verbs, but is an abbreviation for it might
happen, it may be, perhaps— for tasse, fere. " He asked me, it may be, twenty
drachmae for a cloak ; eight, it may be, for shoes : he requested me, it may be, to
purchase gowns for his sisters, and a pretty little robe for his mother ; and he de-
sired, it may be, to have four bushels of wheat."
The real meaning of , if, shows that it is not, as Hoogeveen and other critics
same import with . Dunbar, improving
after him absurdly assert,
on this absurdity, derives this last particle
of the

Hebrew
from ,
or
the imperative of
(ken) in Greek characters, both being
, lay down*

grant; whereas is the particle p


adverbs meaning nearly the same, firmly, truly, at least, so, thus.

PREFACE. xvii

The letters and are convertible in all languages. Thus the plural termina-
tion o* (eem), of nouns in Hebrew, is (een), in Chaldean and Arabic ; and con-
versely the termination ov in
in composition

becomes vtv
sometimes becomes
-, ,
Greek

a form of swearing,
is um
;
in Latin.

is
On the
takes also the form of
converted into
same

, ,.
principle,

. Con-
;

formably to this change, the negative assumes the form of , which in Latin
is

or
from
, ,
ne; but in Greek this form exists only in

,.
ignorant; , infant, childish,
compound words,
from ,
-
} , as 3 for

merciless,
,
Though conveys a negative sense, critics suppose that on some occasions it

is

of
redundant.
its effects
Thucydides, speaking of
to be aitocia rou
Hudson, observes, " Amytdog abundat
,,
,

men in the plague at Athens, states one
where Dunbar, on the authority of
Angl. the want of rest." But aitopia here
means perplexity or distress, rather than want, which sense restores the word to
its proper force, distress from not resting. The same historian adds, that the dis-
ease was the cause of
8' ,
much anarchy
in other respects
" For every one dared things
d
ac- (' ,
cording to his inclination
hitherto he concealed, so as not
5

{- )
that is, without ceremony or disguise, openly) which
to do them openly." Thuc. 2. 53.
But to return to the law of association. A word in composition often borrows
from other words ideas not its own ; and the accidental associations to which all
words are thus subject, render their meaning liable to endless variations, cause them
to be transferred from one thing to another, till by changes of termination acci-
dental or designed, they split into distinct words ; or, if they continue the same,
have a sense very remote from the primary, and perhaps opposite to it. The
Hebrew, as being very ancient, furnishes striking illustrations of this fact ; and in
order to show as on a map the way by which the original language of mankind
multiplied not only within itself, but spread in process of time into distinct tongues,
I will here select one or two examples.
The primary sense of Xfb)S (tzalo), is a side: hence it means ribs, which form the
side of the human frame beams or planks in a cieling, which are as it were the
j

ribs of a house -, the leaves of a folding door, which may be considered the ribs of
the door j chambers or cells which lined the sides of a temple. In Chafdee it
means skin, which covers the side : and hence it was applied to a couch made of
skin, or to makers or venders of skin ; though in this tongue it denotes also a rib.

From the cells or chambers which lined the sides of a temple, means a cave or it

hole on the side of a rock hence in the iEthiopic it signifies a cave or den; whence
:

the Latin silex. From signifying a hole in a rock, it came in the same to mean an
ulcer or a hole in the body. The word exists in Syriac in the form of bynt, J? and
b being transposed ; and borrowing the iEthiopic sense of ulcer, it denotes to be

filthy, to stink ; and hence as a noun it signifies pollution, defilement, mud. From
this source seems to have flowed the Gothic seile, or the English to soil. The
Arabians borrowing the Chaldee sense of skin, used it to mean to strip the skin, to

make bare, to defraud. Hence they apply it to a piece of ground that is naked
and bare, a barren rock; to a person destitute of bair, bold ; to a person destitute
— — —
xviii PREFACE.
of fortune or comforts, poor. Hence in Hebrew it expresses poverty or adversity.

Ps. 39. 15. In Arabic, moreover, it means a rib, or the strength which ribs give
to the frame. From this it came to characterize an animal with stout ribs, robust,
solid. In this language it further means to be crooked or bent like a rib hence :

the Hebrew to be bent, inclined, or weak in body, to be lame. Gen. 32. 31 and ;

the Arabic, to be crooked in mind, depraved, perverse.


Though nouns frequently give birth to verbs more or less in every language, all
nouns were themselves originally derived from verbs, as expressing adjuncts or
attributes of things, which verbs alone express ; and there are in Greek, Latin,
and even modern tongues, verbs which owe their birth to words which exist as

nouns in Hebrew or some other of the ancient oriental tongues. Thus the verb
tp5 (caphaph), or ffO (cuph), means to bend, to round or form a curve; hence as
a noun in the form of tp (caph), it means any thing hollow, such as a cave, a cup,
palm of the hand, the handle or hilt, as laid hold of by the hand shoots or twigs
springing in clusters from a stem, as the hand from the wrist. Lev. 23. 40. the

clouds, as being hollow and rising by exhalation from the ground. Job 36. 32.
From caph,
the Greek , hollow, or a thing hollow,
hollow, light,
came the Latin cavus, cavea, and our cave;
and moreover our cup, and the Greek a -,
many

,
little cup. From the same source also flowed, by prefixing or, (as in other
,-, a hollow place, cavity, or an instrument to make hollow, such as a
words,)
spade used in digging
skiff. From the
and
;

same stem
,, to dig, and
in the sense of handling,
a canoe, boat, whence our
came the Greek a -,
handle, hilt, ana the Latin capio, (expressive of the hand in receiving,) and the Gothic
hand in imparting. From given, the perfect participle
giff or give, the action of the
of this, came by syncope the Scotch conjunction gin, and by apocope our giff,
if, conveying the same idea, it being given or granted. The action of the hand in

grasping was naturally transferred to the mouth opening to take food hence the
Greek ,, ,,
mouthful, and
in the form of
,,
*
munch or to bite, and the English gape, gasp,
mouth, with gap (an opening). From

(koph),
to

came
sprang the compounds

the Greek ,,
to bite at, devour. Equit. 491. Finally, from the
to bend,
:

and the Latin cubo,


,
to open the

Hebrew
a

cumbo, and cubitus, (the place where the arm bends,) the elbow.
Nouns in Greek, as in English, frequently give birth to verbs ; and this is a
feature in that noble language most worthy the attention of a Lexicographer.

,,,
The names of things, as being objects of sense, are in many instances definite j

,
,
and hence they furnish a clue to define those verbs which are derived from them to
express their active qualities. Thus from ,-, we have or

,
the air,
to express the action of the air, that is, to lift or remove ; to

hang or float in the air j which exists only in


§,
its

^,compound
to mount
to act as

duce, subdue
in the air, soar.

; ,
a female, give suck ;
a hand,
On

, this principle
--, less,

to take in
--,
to or ,,
,
a female, gave birth

hand, handle, also to


under the hand, subject. This analogy runs through the language j and great ad-
vantage might be derived from it by a skilful Lexicographer. We have a remark-
to make less,

to
re-
bring

able instance of this in fixing the sense of axratvw, which is understood to mean

lift

from ,
up. Phrynichus explains ,
, .
a reed out of which arrows were made.
, it
PREFACE.
by who erroneously derives
Timaeus, Hesychius, and the
xix

it

Etymologieon, gloss
of
sense of it is
is beyond doubt
to
it by

clamber up a rock
, broken rocks, or shore
and iEschylus with much propriety applies it
;
lirfiav,

j
But
and hence the primary
the parent

to the priestess of Apollo climbing up the side of a cave. Eum. 36. The phrase

tiful

would , is used by Anacreon, and not unworthy of iEschylus, being a beau-

metaphor copied from waves breaking over rugged rocks—foaming rage; nor
as the Etymologieon suggests, unfitly express the motion of a horse
when rearing or scampering along rugged ground.
A word in Greek, as in Hebrew, is often applied to a thing as expressive of only
one leading quality in it and when by association it has coalesced with its ob-
j

ject, that word becomes an index of all the complex ideas which compose it and j

if by comparison a second or third thing is marked by the same leading idea, it is

applied to these also, and thus becomes an index of the complex ideas which form
them. In this complex state, the simple primary idea found in each object is apt to

,
be overlooked and thus the self-same term stands as the representative of several
$

-
objects,

, broken,
—,
,
between which there appears little or no resemblance. For example,
is from to break : hence we have , scil. , broken earth,

, ,
rocks, shore scil. the broken gift of Ceres, i. e. bread, in
allusion to the ground being broken to raise corn, or to the corn being broken to
make meal. Again, probably by transposition from a thing which
hides, such as the doubling of a garment, fold —a place concealed by folds, bosom
—a part of the sea inclosed by the doubling of the land, bay. Moreover, airruj,

to touch, means also to touch with fire, that is, to set on fire, to kindle. And here
we discover an error into which Lexicographers have too frequently fallen ; namely,
the supposing that a wide difference in sense proceeds, not from accidental as-

, ,
different verb from

voice to
which does not
lie down, which
exist.
,
sociations, but from difference of origin.
to kindle.

in this sense
But the primary sense of
is
Thus they take

referred to
to fasten, to be a

to speak, means often in the middle

is to
or
gather,
,, and
a verb

,
in a reflex sense, is to gather one's self to lie down or repose. Hence the ex-
pression " he
Finally,
is the Ionic form of
is

scil.

ho
,
gathered to his fathers,"
is supposed
—coming wind,
in the
i.

i.
e. lies

e.
down with them in the grave.
Lexicons to be from
coming after the ship
-,

and driving
but it

it on prosperous wind. II. a. 479.


It often happens, however, when a word expresses very dissimilar things, that it

or more distinct words. Thus


comes
,
undergoes by accident or design a change of termination, and thus it is split into two
meaning broken rocks or broken corn, be-
when meaning broken light from the clouds.» lightning, thunderbolt—or
broken light from the sun, a ray, beam. The Hebrew (or), with the Greek ter- ^
mination, is -,
a mountain. But mountains commonly form the boundaries
which separate one country from another hence VlJJ (gibel), which in Hebrew ;

means a mountain, in Arabic means a limit or end ; and from this we have gable-
end of a building, which, retaining its original idea of elevated ground, forms
c2
xx PREFACE.
that part of the roof from the eaves to the top. The same Arabic term, as de-
noting end, gave
transition that
more precision,
, rise to the old

became
English word gabel, a tax or impost, by the same
which signifies end, signifies also a tribute. For the sake of
diversified into , or the Ionic , meaning a
limit, or one who watches the such as the god Terminus, a guardian, watch.
limits,

,
The word, moreover,

this
which
we have
is

a still
is applied to a hollow place lined by narrow limits j hence

remoter form in ,,
thought to be a different word, means a groove or channel,
water passing through a groove or pipe,
From

urine.

and
the
,
Welsh
This last gave birth to the verb
limits) to the Latin ora,
certain spaces of
call talar, which
a side, coast.

Verbs frequently acquire secondaiy, or what


is
Finally, from the
known and determined
a corruption of the Greek
mingo, and

may be
(in its

same source we have

.
primary sense of

extent, end, ridge.

called consecutive senses,


This

Thus ,
bearing no resemblance to the primary sense, but following from
from the previous circumstance, or from the association of some peculiar custom.
to use, in the perfect tense and participle
when used
it as consequences

means to want. The


consumed by use, is

,
reason that the experience of certain articles or

.
is,

necessarily followed
aware of this, derive
need. But
,,
by the desire of more.

this verb, like egeo in Latin,


H. Stephen, Damm, Dalzel, being not
on the authority of Eustathius, from
has no passive form
to

; and if it had, its

perfect participle would be


When
circumstance , -,
a person listens to another, he
hearing, listening, came
is necessarily quiet
to
and
be used adverbially
silent. From
in the dative,
this

, '. ,
ccKt], by syncope
for
for

Hesychius took
with silence or
The Doric form of
silliness.

the syncopized form of


is
It is used also in the accusative,
", and the Ionic
-,
rjxa, silently,

which exists only in


gently.

,
the dative and accusative, for a point or remedy. Hence he gives
, as

, ),
one meaning of
to
,,"
that term
as their common
; and Schneider, following
root. The etymology
this

of
blunder, refers
Damm
, is still more pre-
yJKa,

,
posterous j says he, " quasi referring it to or to open the
mouth; and yet he gives it the very contrary meaning, without opening the mouth.

,
Because a person listening cannot be speaking or otherwise engaged,
under the modified form of
This too Schneider refers to the imaginary root axy
his appetite for absurdity,

, on the same
which is nearly synonymous with
fictitious
he engrafts
stem. But
-
, came to express the consecutive idea of silent.

These are specimens of the fooleries


.
is
; and, as if

which Hesychius glosses by


evidently the Ionic form of
this did not satisfy

,-
on which the Lexicons of Damm and Schneider are constructed, men in other re-

From ,
spects immortal in the annals of Greek literature.
blood, we have ,
fond of blood, cruel. This epithet means also

,
expert; and in this sense the above-mentioned Lexicographers derive

ideas.
which
A man
is owing to inattention to the principle of
given to shed blood is a man
connexion between the two
given to hunt; and he who
it from

is eager
becomes by practice material to ob-
in the chase,
serve, that the skill implied in
skilful to

is
catch the game.
confined to hunting,
It is

& {
, II. . 49.
PREFACE.

gives
meant
The verb
it

is that of , means, to lie withtheface upward


the transitive sense of to lay open a name, that
which consisting of
.• but iEschylus, Septem,579,
is, to

and
analyse it. The name
was ominous of
the great strife he would have with his brother.
is

open
owing

practice.
trails

and Eteocles
to the
for inspection.
custom of turning the victim on
The words
In the tragedian, the seer lays open the
of a victim, and from
his brother.

of the sublime genius of iEschylus


its component parts he
The consecutive
its

of the apostle, in Heb. 4. 12, allude to the


name , idea of analysing
back, and laying the entrails

predicts the fatal issue to


Schutze thinks such play upon words to be unworthy
; and Blomfield, treading
like the

in his steps, intro-


same
en-
him

duced /,, instead of ovopa, into the text, destroying by that means
the point and
propriety of the passage. The practice of playing upon words, not unfrequent in
the gravest and most refined writers, appears to us puerile in the extreme. Ajax

,
in circumstances of

and the words


deep
<xi
distress, adverts to the similarity

and ,, Ajax, 430.


The same tragedian makes Hercules, now inflamed and agonized by
between his own name

,
the poisoned
robe, to say that his bitterest enemies did not cause him the evils which he expe-
rienced from his amiable and innocent, but, as he thought, perfidious, wife. She
was called to which he alludes as portending hostility to her husband
in her very name, ,. See Trach. 1046 — 1053, compared with 1065. Nei-
ther Brunck, nor Musgrave, nor Porson, has seemingly been aware of this al-
lusion.
The Greek poets, and especially Homer, often use epithets very analogous to
this consecutive sense -, for they seern in many places only to swell the sound, or
to up the measure of the verse, without adding any thing to its importance or
fill

meaning. But we are incompetent judges of their intention in this respect. These
writers were great masters of human nature ; and though they might not be ac-
quainted with the theory of association, as it has since been taught in the school

reflecting on its

iEschylus applies the epithet


This, however, Porson has
and Blomfield retains the
operation in their
-,
of Locke, Hartley, and Priestley, they fully comprehended

marked
common reading,
own minds,
to

as doubtful.
or observing

G. Burges proposes
its

it

only because, as he says, he could find


in others.

sea-sounding shores, Prom. 736.


,
practical effects, by
Thus

nothing better. But the poet had an ulterior purpose in view. The shores at
which his

spacious caverns ; -
eye glanced, in order to echo the sound, and to roar as
roaring of the waves, must have been rocks, towering, precipitous, and
and he uses the adjective
conduct the imagination of his reader, like electric fluid,
as the
beyond
it were

most appropriate to
itself, and
in the

full of

fix it

on these vast and magnificent images.


The
not simply
priest of Apollo
mean to
when addressing
compliment them as wearing
the Greeks as
fine boots,
,, but as
II. .
officers
17, did
whose
rank was marked by the form of their greaves. Among the Romans the senators
distinguished their order by a crescent on their boots 5 and a modern writer, if
he used the Homeric style, might call a certain class of noblemen " well -gartered.
Englishmen. " Nor did Homer simply mean to designate the Greeks as wearing
:

xxii PREFACE.
,,,
,
long hair, when he calls them hairy, but as freemen and citizens

,
of Greece, slaves being not permitted to wear hair j nor yet when calling them
II. . 123, did he intend to hold them forth merely as high-minded,
but as persons too lofty not to regard and resent as an insult the attempt to take
back the shares which had already been given them.
$, applied to Achilles, may be deemed
Moreover, the epithets
trifling and inappropriate.
,
But the poet by the use of them intended his readers to conclude that his hero

The
In

of the verse
Iliad a.

epithet

passes the sea.


,
spoke as he acted, and displayed the same abruptness, the same vehemence and
impetuosity, in the senate, which characterized him in the

j
439,

for

nificant in itself, could not


we

every reader
But Homer
are told that Chryseis landed from the
considered in

well
fail in
itself,

who has ever heard of a ship, must know that it


knew that an adjunct, however trite or insig-
certain circumstances to
field.

" sea passing


adds nothingto the weight or the sense

become a conductor
ship."

to

images the most beautiful, and to sympathies the most interesting to the human
heart. This end is here answered by irovtoiropoio as it serves to remind the —
reader that the young princess had crossed the sea, it leads him to imagine the

joys she felt on being restored to her native land and to the arms of her father,

after having escaped the perils of the ocean, and the hardships of captivity in a
foreign land.

The novelty and importance of a Greek and English Lexicon, together with the
change which such a publication aims at producing in the education of the country,
would not fail, I flattered myself, to secure the prompt notice of the critical Jour-
nals. From them I expected remarks that would materially contribute to the im-
provement of my work. Among these, I awaited, not without some solicitude, the

decisions of the Edinburgh and Quarterly Reviews, which are conducted, as is well
known, with great talents and erudition and without a portion of whose approba-
;

tion no work can hope to any great extent to receive the sanction of the public.
My expectation, however reasonable, has hitherto been disappointed j and I do not
regret the delay, if the present improved state of my book will secure it a more fa-
vourable reception, or cause it to pass with less severity through the fiery ordeal

of those periodical works. The Lexicon, indeed, has been noticed, and noticed not
without commendation, in the Classical Journal, and some of the magazines. The
Eclectic Review has subjected it to a more formal and elaborate criticism ; and
though that critic strenuously disputes the merits of my work in regard to etymo-
logy, I should be deficient in gratitude if I did not acknowledge my obligations in

the main to his candour and talents. ' In some cases," says he, " we see reasons
for questioning the judgement of the author, and shall have occasion as we pro-
ceed, to notice some of the defects and errors of his work ; but we should not do
him justice if we did not express ourselves very strongly in favour of the Lexicon
• before us, and give it the benefit of our recommendation."
Very different was the treatment which I experienced from the conductors of
PREFACE. xxiii

the Westminster Review. Soon after the publication of my Lexicon, this Journal
was set on foot by a junta of noisy and specious pretenders, for the purpose, as they

professed, of diffusing over the nation more liberal and enlightened sentiments, and
to preserve the sacred sti earns of literature free from the alloy of party spirit in poli-

tics and religion. Yet at the very commencement, when the profession of liberality
and justice was breathing fresh on their lips — in direct violation of that truth, ho-
nesty, and candour, to the maintenance and diffusion of which they affected to de-
dicate their successive numbers, they hired an anonymous assassin to stab my

book a flaming bigot, by calumny, falsehood, and misrepresentation, to weigh
it down j for no other reason than that its depression was calculated to raise them

in the opposite scale, as competent guides to the public on subjects of criticism.


To this pseudo-criticism I published a Reply, in which I unsparingly exposed the
vanity, the ignorance, the stupidity, and malice of the writer. A great mass of
critical matter is here condensed within a narrow compass, which I flatter myself
will in time render it more known, and cause it to be held in remembrance, when
this literary banditti with their Journal have sunk in oblivion.
The Westminster Reviewers brought against me the serious charge that
my Lexicon. The charge, however, is a ma-
smuggled unscriptural dogmas into
lignant falsehood, as there is not an article in the book from beginning to end,
which gives it countenance nor is there any thing material which a liberal di-

,
;

vine, however orthodox, would be anxious to see changed. If any obnoxious


matter occurred in the work, it might be expected under the term which I

interpreted at large, and which I am persuaded every critic will concede to be


and just. The two following facts justify my assertion, and cause the
scriptural
calumny of the Reviewers to rebound in infamy on themselves. A large propor-
tion of the first edition was bought at the Universities, without any complaint
made The Eclectic Reviewers
against the book as tainted with peculiar notions.
are inferior to none in zeal for orthodoxy the gentleman who in that Journal 5'

criticizes works of learning, possesses undoubted talents. The article on my

my book
on the term
acknowledge to be just
,
Lexicon contains proofs of
the full benefit of his recommendation.
which
;

explanation more complete in the present work.


his jealousy

and I
I
and vigilance
He
should be inferior to him in candour
;
yet he scruples not to give
has indeed

have availed myself of his suggestion, to render


made one remark
if I did not
its

My reasons for attempting to explain the Scriptures and referring to them, are
thus stated in my Answer to a Pseudo-criticism. " The most distinguished among
the classic scholars of the eighteenth century, well known, paid little attention
it is

to the Scriptures, and therefore were little conversant in biblical learning. While
they studied with the utmost zeal, and examined with the minutest care, the
writings of Greece and Rome, the oracles of God they thought to be either be-
neath their notice, or beyond their province. The cultivation of the Greek lan-
guage is productive of many great and solid advantages ; and the chief in my
opinion is, that it enables every scholar to draw sacred truth pure and unmixed
from the original fountain, without any regard to the traditions of men. I wiahed
to encourage this use of classic literature, by applying it to the elucidation of ob-
xxiv PREFACE.
;Scure or mistaken passages in the New Testament. In doing this, it was my fixed
purpose to confine myself to general principles of criticism, without seeking to in-
validate any article of general
on the one hand, or to countenance obnoxious
belief
sentiments on the other. my models the brightest ornaments of the
I chose for
English Church, Kennicott, Lowth, Sir W. Jones, Watson, Paley, and Parr j and
I felt that if in any degree I were animated by the same spirit which inspired these
great men, and kept within the limits of their views, 1 should have nothing to fear
from the calumnies of gloomy bigots."
It gives me sincere pleasure, that to the judgement of the Westminster Review,
I am able to oppose the opinion of the late venerable and ever to be lamented
Dr. Parr, in regard to the merits of my Lexicon. A little before the time in which
the critique appeared, I received from him a letter on the subject, of which the
following is an extract.
" Do not suppose that I have lost sight of your great talents, or your great li-

terary attainments, or your great kindness in sending me a copy of your Lexicon.


1 have examined it again and again ; and I have no hesitation in pronouncing it

the work of a man of sense and a man of learning. The usefulness of it is indis-

putable, and my hope is that it will be extensively known and justly valued. I

have read attentively in Rees's New Cyclopedia, the article on grammar, which is

ascribed to you and Gilbert Wakefield. You are victorious over Home Tooke :

but I cannot follow you in your derivations of the learned languages j


yet even
when I dissent from you, I see strong vestiges of your acuteness and your erudi-
tion. The grammar article in the British Encyclopedia is very able : I do not
know the writer, but I think that in some particulars you have grappled with him
successfully. After what has been said in that book and in the New Cyclopedia,
and in the Metropolitan, there remains little for a scholar to wish for. Your pre-
face is very sensible, and you have made a good use of all the sources which you
specify."

A few general Observations calculated to enable Learners to find Words


in the Lexicon,

1. The

iotu; xel, is for

combination the
conjunction

/
si;

is
,,
with a vowel, and must therefore be separated.
is

for ; ^,
often combined with the succeeding word, if that word begin

generally subscribed, and this indicates that


Thus xxv or
for
xyv,

,
is

, /.
,
,.
for xv or xxt

forms a part of the


By this

word.

for
Qstx;
;
,
2.

, , ;;,
These and
A
,
^^ , &; , .
Before an aspirated vowel xxi becomes
similar combination takes place with the article

;
for
for 6
ovopcx;
for
; /\, for 6
for

similar contractions occur chiefly in Attic writers,


for
; , ,;
for
o,

for
or the relative
',
kvexx;

and
, -,
',,
, as
for

especially in the
\-
for

Attic poets.
5. A word drops its final vowel before another word beginning with a vowel ; thus ,
PREFACE xxv

, , , « !

\
,
-s, tots, ih, ovo?, en, ots, i»Kj are read , cte, r, rof, < ',
avh\ 5/r,

.
$,§
&Y,

, .
/l»', '/.

This apostrophe takes place in nouns, adjectives, pronouns, and verbs, as


for
It is

VOC. of
; ,

not unusual for a diphthong to be cut


for or ;£££
off, as
;

\ ;
(

; i*jy', for
for
, for

',
;
, for
for

.
4.

into its
The consonant

, , \ * , \ —'\ , .
$ , ); , ,
Thus
corresponding aspirate,
that

become
becomes
if
final in

become
;
consequence of the apostrophe,
followed by an aspirated vowel; as

;
SjjtT ; , scuff ,\@ is changed
for

5.

6.
;
When, however,

, /;'-,', ,-;
of the succeeding word
', ; ,', . for ;
the final vowel
is apostrophized; as
is long, or the

for
be a noun, adjective, participle, or pronoun,
In seeking for a word, whether it

the learner must look for the nominative case only; and as these words occur under
v\
word itself

for \
for
monosyllabic, the

for
initial

for

various terminations, he should be perfectly acquainted with the models of the declen-
sions, so that he may know the corresponding nominative of every noun when in any of
the oblique cases.
With a view that he may impress them on his memory, with the principal peculiarities
of each dialect, I will here setdown the models of the declensions.

FIRST DECLENSION•. SECOND DECLENSION. THIRD DECLENSION.


Singular. Singular. Singular.

N. x, rlt , . 0:, O'J. , , , , , , , , -S

G. ,, ,. w, . :.
D. X, 1J,
X, 9f. , . .
Ac. xv, , xv, . OV, O'J. or .
Dual. Dual. Dual.
N. Ac. X, X, XI, XI. , . .
G. D. Xl'J, XIV, OI'J, Oi'J. .
Plural. Plural. Plural.

. XI, XI, XI, XI. 01, X. ec, .


G. ,, , . 0!v, . ,.
D. , ,,
xtc, ,. , .
Ac. , ;, ;. ,. ,.
7. It is here to be observed, that of the four terminations belonging to the first de-
clension, x, yi, are those of feminine; ,, of masculine nouns, as being the names of
men, or the offices and characters of men.
8.

into x, thus
Be

as well as at the
it

, .
further observed, that in the Doric dialect,
Dor.
end of words , , of the

,,
This change takes place at the beginning and in the middle,
,• as %,
: Dor. .
common tongue is changed

Recollect

, , , , , . , .\9,
that the quantity of when changed into remains the same, that is, long.
9. On the other hand, the Ionic dialect changes of the common tongue into , as

, The diphthong
Ion. . , , ,, - on
Ion.
this principle is changed into , as Ion. ;

10.
the Ionic,
nation
Of
,.
.
masculine nouns in
Thus
being used as one syllable, as in
or
Dor.
,
-,
7,,
the genitive

d
in the

Ion.
as if Tlr^Yi'ixh), for
Doric dialect is x, xo, in
the termi-
The

xxvi

.
genitive plural follows the same analogy:
Even feminine nouns
(, , ,,,PREFACE.
^, », Dor.
follow this analogy in the genitive plural, though not
,/.
votnr&v, Ion.

in the singular; as
11. The dative
changed into and / subscribed,
12. The masculine nouns in
r,
and ablative
Dor.
plural termination

, ttioi — $, jjov

form their vocative


; , ,^,, ^.Ion.
has often

in ret, as
/ added,
;
uiat. Then

voc. 9/».
ct is

(, ) ,
Even in the nominative, when such nouns are used adjectively, as is often the case, they
always end in tu, and not in , as truth-counselling Jupiter;
?, equestrian Nestor.
13. The second declension has two terminations, and ov. Most nouns in are
masculine, feminine nouns in o? being comparatively few, whereas
The Ionic dialect changes of the genitive into as , .,
all nouns
Ion.
in o» are neuter.

The

, . ,
14. oio,

,.
Doric changes into both in the genitive singular, and the accusative plural;
Dor.
poets, as
15.
; Dor.
"hoyohv.
; Dor.
In the dative plural t is

In the third declension, the oblique cases are formed by assuming the terminations,
In the dual number
added,
; is

; ,.
doubled by the

e?> tj
— St otu —) U y f /) , : the nominative of any noun is found by rejecting these
terminations. But as it happens that besides this addition other changes often take
place, a knowledge of the grammar, and some practice, are necessary to find the nomina-
tive of a noun in the third declension.
16. In the same manner, the variations of adjectives, pronouns, and participles, are
learnt only from the grammar but it will be useful to remember, that the terminations

sitive
and ;
may be found from
characterize the comparative;
:

these by retracing the changes


, ?, the
made
superlative
in forming them. All
and that the po-
com-
parative and superlative adjectives are to be found under their positive.

A Jew general Rules for finding the Themes of Verbs.


1. The first person of a verb in the present indicative, ending in , is to be looked
for in the Lexicon. The passive opui comes under the active in ; and pctt under ,**/.

2. In order to find the theme or root of any verb, the most effectual way is thoroughly
i. e. all the variations of mood, tense,
to learn the models of verbs, number and person,
and middle, and also the changes by which one tense is formed from an-
active, passive,
other. The rules by which you ascend from the root to the branches must only be re-
versed to descend from the branches to the root.
3. The verb undergoes a change in the beginning, as well as the end ; and this cir-
cumstance is one of the chief difficulties in finding the themes of verbs. The imperfect,
the first and second aorists, the perfect and pluperfect active, passive, and middle, have

an augment, which must be thrown away in order to come at the stem. Thus must
always be rejected, and with it the consonant which constitutes the reduplication of the
perfect and pluperfect.
4. There are but few verbs which begin with (such as ,, ,) in the present
may therefore be concluded

,
tense. It in general, that the initial « is but an augment o£

,^,
u or

By
5.

this
5

With
— most commonly of the former;

uiqo),

regard to
^,) comparatively but few;

means the simple verbis more


is

,,) are very numerous.


compound
for the

verbs, the best


number of verbs beginning with
while those which begin with a (such as

way
easily obtained,
is always to separate the preposition.
and is perhaps already known.
(such as
PREFACE.

, , ",,,
The compound then becomes also known ; and if some of the prepositions be prefixed
in succession, a cluster
pressed by each preposition.
of words
Thus
is attained with the shade of difference which
in by separating or , I have
is

vfruov
ex-
or

means,

^,
went up;
, .
which
I went away;
is the second aorist of

3
I
I went out;

went down, returned;


or

^*,
I

I
I

went
went
go or come.
into, entered;

by, surpassed; ,
-, then,
I
I

,
went under; went to, visited; I I went with. Moreover of
the common tongue is changed in the Doric dialect into Hence we have «xaji/-

6ov, &c. in the same sense.

, , ,,,,
6. In order rightly to decompose
prepositions
xvy ,,,,
xvx,
compound verbs, it must be remembered, that the

,,,,
hx, in verbs beginning with vowels, become

,,,.
/. Moreover, if that vowel be aspirated,

, ;
become
7. it is however to be recollected, that the Ionic dialect substitutes the

, , - lenis for the

,
aspirate,
Ion.
The - and therefore retains the prepositions unchanged; as
; Ion.
becomes
Ion.
; ,. •,
-, -,-,
-, -, -.—
,
Ion.

,
preposition

,
8. before y, ; as
becomes , ,,,, ;

-
?>, before as
The

, .
mented
9. ,
preposition,
tenses, as

, , ", ^, ,
In the same
however, resumes

manner becomes
its proper letter by the vowel assumed in the aug-
&c.
before a vowel ; as imp. -

. aor. 2.

; ;

;
In the Attic dialect

, , , ,,,;,^,.
10. is as for

11. not only loses its final vowel, but frequently changes its last consonant to
be the same with the initial one of the succeeding word; as for ;

for ; for for


12. and retain their final vowel; as and not and
^--
..
not

or even
^-.
,,, , however, combines with the augment into
when compounded in the Doric dialect, becomes
; as
or

; ,,
13. The Attics change into %uv; but all words combined with this preposition are

.
^, , -
to be found in the Lexicon under

.
,,,
comes

as
1 4. before y,
as
, ,
This preposition resumes
becomes

&C.
—before ,

its
becomes

—before , , , ,
proper form when the augment intervenes
be-

Irregularities in the Formation of Verbs, caused by the Dialects.


1. The rules of the augment in the common tongue are pretty uniform; but the pe-
culiarities introduced by the dialects are irregular and various.
augment

, , ,'*,; , ,'/,; , ^, ,, ,
2. Homer, whenever the metre requires, avoids the in all the tenses

3. The
, ;
Attic writers prefix the syllabic to the temporal augment, or double the sj liable,

and then contract

able,
aor. 1.

imp.
Att.
into n; as

Att. , imp.
imp.

d2
Att.

I
Att.
was about or delayed.
aor. 1. Att.
I was
— — — —

xxviii PREFACE.

,
feet
4. When a
augment; as , ,,
verb begins with a vowel, the Attic writers prefix the

or even iihrihovuc:;
p. m. Att. -;
perf. vfhxxx, p. pass,
,,, p. m.
first

Att.
syllable to the per-
Att. ~\,
/, have I
or

;
been driven.

, , ,/., ,;
5.

,"^,,,
aorist, to
The

,
, ,, , -
Ionic writers prefix the reduplication or augment of the perfect to the second
the first and second
— aor.
futures,

2.
and in
for
some verbs even
-ziu,
to the present.
for
Thus,

for

.
sync,

Ion.
6.

, ; , , , , ,
But
;

this

;
more frequently
%",
for
This reduplication takes place in the future; as
and contraction

f. ,
Ion.

m. ,,
obtains in the middle voice;
Ion.
fut. Ion.

:
or

and
f.
fut.

fut.

this constitutes
by sync,
m.
by

what

,
called the paulo^ost-futurum in the common tongue.

, ; , ,;
is

, ,
,
7. The Ionic, conformably to the Attic dialect, doubles the first syllable of the perfect,

.
- ,,,
p. pass,
in the present tense; as
>}., Ion.

^,
^,,. This reduplication obtains with some verbs even
Ion.
", $, ,,

^; , , ,
Ion. by sync, To this we may refer
for ,.
;
',

8. The Attic dialect changes into as Att. while the Doric re-
solves into , as ,,
, -
ovpivha.

, , ,, , ,
9. In the iEolic dialect, which was the most ancient form of the Greek language, the
second person of the verb was in Set; as c^xg, or thou seest— ala,
p. m. oihx, Mo\. by sync, thou knowest.

. 10. In the passive voice the second person ends regularly in


,
as

Homer. This

called
1 1.
;
The

,
a is then excluded, and

,
in the
clude x, and contract the two remaining vowels into
fut.

As the subjunctive mood


of
common tongue is

thou shalt
is
we have

see.
the Ionic form
contracted into

derived from the indicative in


— ,,, sj

all
usually adopted by
; hut the Attics ex-

the tenses by changing


thou art

,,
the short into its

,^,
corresponding long vowel,
,
of the latter becomes nxi in the former
^,

,, ,-
as thou askest, thou mayest ask; thou obeyest, if thou

.
obey;
12. On
in the first persons dual

&,
,. , , ,
thou returnest,
the contrary,

13. In the first aorist active

,
,
and plural;
thou mayest return.
as naturally coalescing with
as

and middle, the poets double the


, is inserted before it

by the poets

of verbs whose present


is

;,
for
, .,, ., ,. ,
imperative
for the sake of the metre; as

and circumflex the


for

for
final ; as
fut.
It is

of
fut.
aor.

On
1.

This duplication sometimes takes place in the corresponding


occasionally adopted also in the future
for

the other hand, the Attics reject the


Att.
he carried; xo-

,
,
14.

, ,, ,, ,
The Ionic writers more generally follow this analogy; and all verbs in whose

,, ,
future and not have the excluded, as fut. by sync, which in

;, , ,
is

the , common tongue is contracted I will say ; f. Ion. contr.

contr. sha, I will drive;


*), Ion. ,
f.

f. , ,, Ion.
Ion.
Ion.
contr.
-,
contr. ,
.-,
fut.

I
, ,,~,, , ,
I

will say;
will pay;
Ion.
Ion.
f.

contr. ktu, I will kill;


f.
Ion.

Ion.
contr.
1 5.
; §, f. %, Ion. $, contr. $.
The poets in the room of the excluded insert , , -, ,,, ".
., as <, §, for
; ;

§Wto. And this is the origin of the poetic verbs in , for ia\ as for
— ;

PREFACE. xxix

new

,, , ,
, ,
16. It

., ,
verb.

,, ,
is

Thus ,
a remarkable peculiarity of the Greek verb, that every tense gives birth to a
future of or , assumes the form of contracted

,, ; ,,
; and hence the
fut. of ,
, I
fut. med.
breathe, becomes
for
Hence
I shall fall.

he
Thus, too,
will breathe ; so

,
is

,, ,
17. The
for he will be
iEolic or Doric then change
; and
into v; as
for fut. m. of
for
will flee.

, ,,,',,, "!., \,
for or fut. of I sing.

. The above principle unfolds the origin of the Attic circumflex in such verbs as
18.
The future
contraction, we have
first becomes

fut. m.
and from this, by excluding a and by
I adorn, f. ;
;

fut. m. inf. Att.


19. The most mood seems to have been the Doric
ancient form of the infinitive ,
as ,,§,, ,.
and hence by inserting / we have uv of the common tongue. But the poets often use
for the infinitive, which seems to have been derived from the obsolete form in

to be;
infinitive
;

to give.
}>,
To this
; $, 5, to put
is usually added
; ,,
after the analogy
or , for
of the perfect
;
,

, , ^. , , ,
,,, ,^,
The Hence common tongue
,.
20. Ionic dialect changes into . verbs in of the
become in the Ionic dialect ; as Ion.
In the Ionic dialect is often inserted before . Thus for
are written

;,
,;
21.
on the

,
,.
.
The

,
Attic dialect delights to contract
contrary, avoids all contraction. Hence
its nouns, adjectives, and verbs; the Ionic,
it writes for <?ika, fut. of «;

, , - of

,, ,;,.
ovouccuiu), for fut.

, ,; ,
22. The Doric writers, in the first plural, for the final use • Dor.
Dor. In the third plural they use
outi for and xuri for as Dor. Dor.

, ,
they have beaten;

,
write iuti for

. ,
23. In the imperative
of the third person plural.
which to the eye

,
-, or

is
,
mood
perf.

they are
of
:

the Attics change


Thus
and

the same with the genitive plural of the participle.


to swell, Dor.
for
into
by syncope
he
o,
says.

and insert
Hence the Dorians

in the penultimate
Att.
Thus also they

^ ,; ,.
write

;
for
24. In the third person subjunctive jj has
This is
annexed to
borrowed from
it by the poets; as
, the third person sin-

, /, .
gular of verbs in .
. /
25.

, , :
-verbs in

the ,
room of
Verbs in
.
Thus
26. The third plural
Some
of the
verbs, led
common tongue have

also
by
is
this affinity,

for
of the optative
;
derived the
borrow
first

or
belonged to verbs in
person optative
the optative of verbs in
is

, and
for
is
,
from

a con-
in

and

,, common
traction of as for this contraction forms the

.,
;

tongue. On the same principle it is that verbs in are thus syncopized in the same
", --
>,,,/.
mood; as by sync. they may be, be it so; may they give;
/, -
}, . ,-
oxv, In other persons too, of this tense, is often syncopized ; as for

; for
27. A similar syncope takes place in the third person plural of the first and second
aorists passive; as for ; for
28. The third plural of the imperfect and second aorist active was originally in oaxv
but this was syncopized into ou, and thut. forms the common tongue—
701/; >^, JJAitoy.
;

R FAC .
29. The second aorist
,» active of verbs in undergoes a similar abbreviation

, ,,
; as ^*,
by sync, srxv ;

as ,,
30.

)); ,
, );,, >>
The

>
Ionic dialect forms a
;
v.

; new species of verbs by inserting


or
^).
or
before the final a
;

,; ,,
(for (for (for

31. These verbs, and a few others, are used as well in the present as in other tenses.
But
aorist,

6,
>,
in other verbs this Ionic

I
and never
desired;
reprove, for
,^.
in
form is used generally in the imperfect, rarely in the first
any other tense ; such as
aor. J. of , to hurl, for
for ;

aor. 1.
for
of
-
~
, , , ,
This form is uniformly without an augment.

,
, ,
,, , ,
Jon.
Ion.
,
32.
instead of

.
.
The Ionic writers form the third person plural of the passive verb by inserting a
of the
they
common
lie ;

they might rejoice, acr.


tongue.
Ion,
Thus

2.
or ,, Ion.
they perished, plup. pass, of
m. optat. of
they sit;

,
33. On this principle it is that the third plural of the perfect, which by analogy is

, ,
,,', , ,
in the Ionic dialect becomes they have been beaten;
becomes
^,
press, has its perfect passive
. 284, were
have been entrusted,

fixed, laid
for
upon.
perf. pass,

Att.
Thus too
of

(for
3. plur.

7\ or
So

),
to fix,

Ion.
perf.

^^,
II.

Att. plup. Ion. had been spread

, ;,
pass,

over, were covered or cased, Od. y\. 86.

,
34. Following this analogy, the Ionic dialect changes

^, by
uf the pluperfect active into
«. Thus

,
Ion. plup. of sync, Att. ydsM, Ion.
,
,,, , ,
yhx, I had known. Agreeably to this analogy, we meet with for nv, I was, imp. of

for
and for
they place, and
they are.
for
To

,
siai,

, or rather ,
the same analogy it is

they go, from the form .,


owing that we read
Hence
the compounds xKtxai,they go away; xt
they go out;

,
,
,
35. Moreover the
the common
'hixat,

,they go through

Thus
or without the augment
Attics
tongue. , /, they go up;
they go to, pursue.
;

formed the third plural of the pluperfect in


for
they had suffered, plup. of
;
, -
//,
,
they go

-,
down ;

instead of
for
or rather
I feel sorrow,

,, , i. e. suffer. ,, the poetic form


$, and
, has for its plup. mid.

,
Hence the plural Att. compounds they had gone
away, departed;
3.

they had gone out; /, its

they had gone back.

, ', ,
;,, , ,
, , , ;
times affected the

, , , , ,,
their perfect

and not

, .
perfect

, ,
.
36. Finally, the Ionic

been dismissed or forgiven, Mat.


for — }>),
and
or

Att.
common

for Iwt.
this for
formed the perfect active or middle by analogy, which some-
tongue. Thus as

has
and not
and not
Jn the same manner
instead of

But
9. 5.
to send,

A vowel is
when doubled
to wet, have for

p. pass,
I
; so

dismiss (for
/,
has
has

3. plur.

often doubled in the poets, as


generally becomes o, as
and not

has in the
have

for
ADVERTISEMENT.

THE object of the Author in the first edition of this work was little more
than to try the public mind. The experiment has succeeded fully to his

wishes, eighteen hundred copies of it being sold in about eighteen months.


His next design was to new- model it, on the one hand into a cheaper edition
for the use of schools, and to enlarge it on the other into a full quarto, as a

book of reference for the libraries of the learned. The second stage of his
original plan is now completed in this edition ; and it still remains, with the
favour of Divine Providence, to fulfill the last, which is by far the longest

and most adventurous. Of the first edition a few copies still remain ; and
as the volume is printed on somewhat finer paper and with a larger margin,
and forming what may be called more of a gentleman's book, these will no
doubt be bought up, not merely on account of the intrinsic value of the

work, but because it will never be reprinted in its original form, and be-
cause in future ages a copy of it cannot fail to be deemed a curiosity, as
the first attempt made in this country to introduce Greek to the know-
ledge of Englishmen through the medium of their own tongue. To the
remaining copies the Appendix belonging to the second edition will be
added gratis.
— — —

GREEK AND ENGLISH


LEXICON.

Ate, the first letter of the Greek al- , AAA


.
not to be touched or controuled,

., ,
ov,

5 phabet, derived from the Hebrew tt.


In composition oc seems an abbreviation of ,,
irresistible, II. oc. 567. a neg.
not to be restrained, quite un-

,
ov,
wtto, from : and as to be from a thing is governable, II. £. 892. for
), —
to be without it, oc when combined with a

*
noun or an adjective gives it generally a
contrary meaning, and is therefore called
cc privative or negative: as death.
without death, deathless, immor-
aor. 1.
or

, ,
f.

for
oca, f.

mislead or deceive by eager or vain desire,


thou hast injured
I

or afflicted, visited with this affliction, II. .


237. ccai, for was, hath blinded me, Od. 61. .
tal, firm, ocQsQociog infirm. If a word occcroci, involves in guilt and misery, II. r.
begin with a vowel, «becomes

,
blood, worthy ; ,, ocv; as
or
ociccoc

ocvoci-
91. aor. 1. m. aaaapw, I was infatuated,
behaved with guilt and folly, II. /. 116. aor.

comes
bloodless, unworthy. On the
contrary, to be from a thing, is the means
of increasing that thing ; as a stream be-
larger, the further it flows
source, or as the branches of a tree are
from its
,desire, II.
ccoctyj, Mo\. ,
I. pass. occcoQyi, was blinded, ruined by guilty

. 685.Heb.nik\\ to desire, h. aveo.


awat, passion or desire as opposed to reason,
malignity, envy, hatred, Herod. 1. 32; 6.
Yic, fr. Heb. %
wider they spread from the stem.
larger, the 61. the influence of j)dssion in blinding
Hence a increases the meaning of a term, the understanding, infatuation, folly, decep-
and ma} be called augmentative or intensive:

or
thus

,
wood, very woody. In
this sense a has much the meaning
and is synonymous with acca to-
, tion— the
guilt, sin,
influence of passion on the heart,
crime the principle of guilt per-
sonified, or the principle
II. r.
of evil,
the consequence of guilt, loss, ca-
91.
fate, fiend,

, ,
gether, of which as some think it is an ab-
breviation.
such words as
This signification it bears in
one who lies with

, , .
lamity, slaughter, punishment, evil, death.
The Heb.niiV, awat, exists in
ccvccT•/!, Pyth. 2. 52.
the Mo\. form

another, a wife, from a and ksm to lie. So


is one of the same bed, from a and
a bed;
womb, a brother, a and
one of the same
;
, —,,,
.- ,,
ccrso,
new verb
f. wo),

oc, ov
from
I
aor. 2.
am infatuated,
,
II. v. 332.

eager of desire,
furious, destructive, deadly, Hipp. 630.
hence the

one of the same weight, equal, a and


^) ov, (from doubled to aug-
a talent.

,
,& - ,
In Greek, as in Hebrew and Arabic, a is
ment the sense, for
ment, reproachful, II. oc. 223.
very vehe-

sometimes prefixed in the formation of


nouns and verbs, and is a pleonasm; as
f^WS,
qoa, accavQoos',
a,
;

7*.7, .
a or a, cry of admiration, astonishment,
sorrow, reproach, ah, ha, o, ho, alas.
a, Dor. for ij, fern, of o.
;

v. 746.

stituents

,
(fr. oc augmentative, and

cessive, furious, Apoll. 1. 459.

,,
,6, , eager for, insatiable, II.
hence by resolving oc into its con-
greedy, Hes. u. 714.
ov, greatly to be desired, longed for

by the suitors, oc being augmentative : but it


ex-

430.
\)
.

olhi\ot, ah wretched men, Od. . 86. may mean xery destructive, Antinous being
a, for ka, neut. plur. of

,
of,
oc,
Dor. for
neut. plur. of

Od. .
fj,

574.
fi,

,
in
.
which way, where.
, which things, quae.
not to be broken, massy club,
priv. to break.
,made to assert the truth without being
aware of it, Od.

sired, i. e.
the waters of Stvx,
.
91. fr. occctyi.
ov, fr. occctyi, not to be greatly de-
awful, sacred, inviolable, said of

*
II. |. 271.
— — — — —

,,
3

,
, ,-
terrify.
f. %, (fr. ,AB
I

a fiend, ghost)
am frightened,

-
I scare, A€/iJTo?,oi/,lifeless,inanimate
Hipp. 821.
life, ,
scil.
ABP
at, life will
— dull,grievous
-
&,
4

, .
scampering through 41. aor. be no life to us, Ion. 670.

, ,. ,
fear, II. 764,

, 1. pass,
alarmed at the sight, 468.
part. scil. sorrow rendering life lifeless, sorrow that
imbitters life,

indecl. the Heb. jmtt, in Greek


the destroyer, Rev. 9. ] 1.
,,, to
Dem.
him was not worth
557. ult. he thought that
living, fr. , .- life

ABAS, £, ,
,
, - -, a sideboard or
also adv. without lifeor animation,

, ,,
dresser

book, box,
a tablet to draw figures, or a slate
to calculate upon, called also

, £,
a being dropped.
or
hence

one who medi- offensive,


or
lead an irksome
,, ,
to live in sadness,
life.

, , harmless, in-
water unhurt, i. e.

,, , &\,

.
tates in silence over a problem, or pores pure, Theo. 24. 94. unhurt, unpunished,

, .
,
aor.

, , ,
over a book.

1.
f.

silent or ignorant of,

,, 6, ,
249.
,
uninitiated in the rites
mute.
\, I am silent, or gaze in silence,
for
Od.


.
they were
CEd. T. 237. neut. plur.

6. 1.

or injury, inoffensively.
adver-
bially, the least injurious, with the least
harm, . a priv.
withoutharm

, , , ,,
,
of Bacchus, Bacch. 472. mournful tram, unshot, new, pointed, II. . 117.

,
Orest. 319. , a priv. hence also
,
,, , , unhit, not wounded by a
interj. alas, Heb. fotf, to mourn. 6,
vj, Eubcea ,, missile arrow, unhurt, II. . 540.

, . ,
the inhabitants of Eubcea.

sinking,
,,
ov,

buoyant, Pyth.
unimmersed — incapable
2. 145.— unbap-
of feeble, timid:
ov, bleating as a sheep, sheepish,
ahelplesshand,
incapable of defending itself, II. e, 337.
i. e.

, . ,, ,
-,
tized,

2 Cor.
volatile,
a

2.
,
priv.

fr.
,
9.— not weighty
,
,
not heavy or burdensome,

, , not subject to a king,


independent, free,Thuc.2. 80.fr.
in mind, stupid,

., , &. , .,,
.
plain, see

or
gentle death,
a death in which the sufferer does not com-
Acts
infirm walls,
II. .
8.

178.
32.

, without shout-
Od.
a augm.

6,
.

,
134.

ov, not put to the torture, un-


examined, adverbially, without examina-
tion,
, Thuc. 1. 20. a priv.
,.
ing, uninvited, 692. adv.
without noise— without a conflict, quietly,
fr. ,
,
., ,
», not to be trod upon, unfrequented, f. ],
I meet, aor. 1. they

) ,,
sacred, Phoeniss. 1741. a encountered, Apoll. 2. 771.
sacred place, a temple,Polyb. 16. 12. 7. — in- Dor. for v\, ov, young, tender.
accessible rock, Prom. 2. compare with Luc. (for Theo. 5. 109, the
1. 186. lofty places,
,,, -
vines are tender.

,
, , — c
precipices, A. 3. 4. 30. impassable river. ABOTA02,oy,o ,ij, unwise,rash,
A€€tf, indecl. father, Syr. iON, Rom. 8. 15.
,, . \ ,,
imprudent, comp. or sup.

,
AQyi^x,

, of contempt,

,, , ,, ,
,,a
,
Dem.
a city of Thrace.
citizen of Abdera, a

», belonging to Abdera. A£-


the disease of an Abderite,
stupidity, madness, Luc. 2. 3.
218. 10.

unstable, unsteady, inconstant,


name

, £, .
,.
151.
14. -
,

imprudently.

Dem.
,

unforeseen distress, Heracl.
a perverse mind, Anacr.
most imprudently,

I am unwilling, inconsiderate,
1471. 19.
adv. unadvisedly,

,
Dem.

,
lity, caprice
1341. ult.
offortune. ,,— the instabi- , the want of wisdom, impru-
dence, rashness, Thuc. 5. 75.

.
,• ,
,—,
-,
sync.
.
adv. without stability or firmness, incon-

,
stantly.

, fr.
,

,
6,

the most
, unadvised, stupid,

tuation, syn.£t/>7^<ei,Luc.3.326.Dem. 140.10.


silly,

,
Dem. 114.

'^stupidity, infa-
4. by ^
I do not dream, am wakeful, vigilant,

Rlies. 730.

delicate,
rich,
,
a

a, ov,

Pyth.
priv.
having no weight,
Eur. Supp. 1 125.
comp.

,
Herod. 1. 71.
3.

,
195. —

sup.
fair,
,
light,

splendid
delightful, exquisite,
opp. to

soft,

6, , without subsistence,

,
or 2. 4. 43. adverbially, Anacr.
poor simple in one's mode of living, and 5, sweetly laughing adv. elegantly,
therefore not liable to invade the property

a priv. .
of others— not unjust or injurious, 11. v. 6.
majestically,
,—
ness, effeminacy.
,,
Med. 824.
, , delicacy, soft-
— —— — ——— . —

,
5
,,
^,
, ,— , — am
G

, ,
f. I deck, adorn— f. I do good to others
I am decked adorn myself, vaunt, imp. beneficent, oblige, 1 Tim. 6. 18.
,

, , , a benefi-
I would have exulted, valued Ion.

,, ,
myself, Plat. Dial. 66. cent act, a noble exploit, Herod. 3. 160.

%^ , , , , one who ,

.
lives in plenty 6, y, a well doer, virtuous,

,
and elegance — ro
living, luxury, Thucyd.
>
delicacy of beneficent,
,— 1 Pet. 2. 14.
do good, am beneficent,

,
1. 6. f. I
, ,

, . ,, , ,,
6, having fine opp. to lead a virtuous life, opp.
hair or delicate locks, Anacr. 6. to
,
, devoted to Bacchus, shouting, ,,
well doing, beneficence
clamorous, II. v. 41. a angm. — a virtuous course, 1 Pet. 4. 1 9.
,
to, southernwood. It was much »;, ,, good-
used in medicine.

, ,,
ness, benignity, beneficence.
ABPOT02, ov, or ,
yi, ov, not mortal, im- adv. well, to be noble
—ambrosial.
. . ,
mortal, divine, Antig. 1149.
for , balmy night,
or affluent, Arist. Rhet.

2. 1 ]

indulge

], ,
,
II.

,
.

, .
19. a priv.
the season of repose or contem-
plation, i. e. the night, from its soothing
my
1016.
see
feelings to excess, admire, Apoll.
— envy,
,.
am indignant

,
at, Od. .
3.
16.

,, . . , ,
influence, II. f 78.
. contracted very glorious,
,, I err in the night, go astray, 738. ayav and
f.

- illustrious, II.
,,,
.
fr.

,,,
>,
governs the genitive, very celebrated, II.
II. . 45, lest we should miss one 463. fr. ayav and

.,
another. ,,, far famed, II. . 436.
ov, unmoistened withrain, perf. part, by
dry, Call. 1.19. undipped, sync, well built, populous,

,, ,
,, , . ,. ,,,, ,
I have an anchor yet unwetted, Pyth. 5. 107. ayav,
I have still one resource left, a priv. ,
, vj, fed on the same milk,
6, , also uneaten,
ov, a brother or sister, having no —
not gnawed, Luc. 1. 616. — one who has milk, a priv. Call. 2. 52.

,
not eaten, hungry 6 a priv. f. I adorn, honour, distin-

,, a city near the Hellespont guish, Olym. 1. 139.


adv. at Abydus. from aor. 1. inf. ayvfhat, set forth, prepare the
Abydus the inhabitants of nuptial bed, Med. 1027.

,
oi
—adorn myself
,
Abydus,

- ,,
therefore a


who were thought perfidious; and

ov,
name of reproach.
for bottomless, Herod.
I am adorned
glory in, pride myself, exult, Dem. 1489. 7.
— celebrate, Bacch. 158. from the Heb.

,
2. 28.
, .
,
abyss,
,,

, ,
a
,
vast wealth, Septem, 952.

priv.
Ion.
scil. yjj, a bottomless

very divine,
pit. hence
bo, geel, with a prefixed.

nament,
— ornament of a temple,
,
a thing prided in, an or-

ornament of a god, statue
offering,

,
ov, ccyctv,
$, most excellent, Nem. — ornament
02, n, ov, comp.
6. 59.
sup.
or consecrated
monument— ornaments
gift

of the night, stars


to the dead,

,—
good good in health, sound, perfect, - —ornament of ivealth, pomp, appendage,

, , ,, ,
— good to work, Prom. 466.— figure, shade, Helen. 712.

-
opp. to skil-
—good ,,
ful, clever, in war, brave,
,,
a little image.

/,
,,, —good
,,
courageous, opp. to to use, f. aor. 1. pass,

, —good
useful, active, cheerful rejoice, exult, John 35.
jjroduce, fertile, rich gooa fortune, happy,
to I
— ,,
5.
joy,
prosperous,
the rich or nobles— ro
good Sir. oi
that which ,
gladness, exultation, Heb.
, the son of Atreus, and
1. 9.

is good

,

bounty, blessing, the chief good.
good fortune, a stated formu-
chief of the Grecian expedition against
or

,
Troy. a,
lary prefacing all the public acts at Athens, ov, of Agamemnon. , 6,

,
and similar to the Roman quod bonumfaus- Orestes, son of Agamemnon.
,

, , - ,,
tum, felixque sit. see Luc. Anal. p. 109. unmarried, without the
, q,
good things, goods, wealth from — privilege of marriage,II. 40. unlawful or .
the Arabic VJJ, geed, with cc prefixed, unhappy marriage, (Ed. T. 1214.
whence also our good, God. ..
adv. too much, very, excessively,
contr. , , one immoderately. It is sometimes used ad-
who
yjt,
does good, a benefactor
Spartan senators. sQyov.
oi jectively with nouns,
71
being understood.
i.

2
e. ,
—— —— — — — —

7
desire

, ,,
which is

scil. ,
excessive, excessive desire.
those who are too
,
,, ,
, -,
inf.,
used only in the pass, or reflex form,
poet, to
8

,
.
young,

me— I
excess,
nothing too much much delights
usfcv

,,—
imp. for
,
admire, to be astonished at, Od. 203.
ye envied, . 122.

,
delight in everything with modera- pass, form of I admire,

tion.
f. , I feel
or in mind, I ache, Diosc. 5. 76. am in-
much pain in body
— ,,— ,
envy am indignant at, Od. . 16. am
incensed against, Herod. 8. 69.
pass, form of I admire, Od.

,,
,, ,
dignantat, fr.
, and Mark 10. 41.
, anger, indignation.
abounding with snow, snowy.
,,
,,
. 129.
,,

,
part, ,,
. 168. envy, or prevent through envy,

,, , adverbialized
with admiration, Arist. Rhet. 3. 7.
-
,
snow, II. a. 420.
02, f. I admire, envy, aor. 1.

,
ov, and , soc, gentle, m. for they wondered
persuasive,

,
adv. placidly, gently.
placid,

,
II.

, gentle minded, placid,


. 189. ocyuvag,

,
at,
(for
Od. . 70.

II. .
where
224,
ZiV
is understood)
we should not then

,
, , , ,,
II. v. 467.
,,
cidity of temper, meekness,
Od. . 202.
,
, gentle-mindedness, pla-
•/»,
on seeing his form have thus admired him.
Ulysses was so handsome as to excite the
admiration of those who beheld him ; but
when he spoke, the beholder forgot his

,
f. p. (Heb. njy) beauty, and admired only his eloquence.
I
Mat.

,»,,
love— treat with
5. 44.
— prefer— covet,
-
tent with. aor. 1.
I
/, ,,,.
— delight
embraced, Od. -. 214.
Luke
hospitality, entertain,
in,

contr.
welcome
11. 43.
for
— respect
—am con- the accusative in
Od. \p.
future for
thou wilt be angry, Od.

211. part,
II. .

honouring, Nem. 11. 7. aor. 1. pass,


,
or
a. 386. It governs
29, but the dative in
venerating,

of

, »,, for I would be in a reflex sense, feeling admiration at,

,, ,, , -,
satisfied or happy, IT. 1. 1. 4. wondering, Pyth. 4. 424.

-,
for
, /,
they loved, Theo. Ep. 4. ov, and ov, to be admired,

,,, , ,
embrace, salutation.
v\
,
a favourite, darling.

I
,
love, embrace,
, love,
worthy of envy or admiration, desirable,
enviable
Hec. 168.— life to me is no longer charm-
ing in the light, i. e. the light of life has to
me no longer any charms,

, ,,
salute Isth. 5. 96, they ac- adv.
costed him with gentle w:~-rds, saluted, hailed. admirably, in a praiseworthy manner.
inf. poet. to che- r„ ov, admirable, illustrious, noble,
rish, favour, II. a. 464. for II. y. 268.

-/\, ,, , love, christian benevolence, a, ov, (from by inserting q)


1 Cor. 13. —
the thing loved, or the object proud, arrogant
insolent,

- ,,
of love, Phil. 2. 2. a person who loves, adverbially, with the greatest pomp and in-

,.
(the abstract used for the concrete) Rom. solence, Herod. 7.57. —
luxuriant in leaves.
1 3. 10. —
attachment to an object in conse- ov, loudly uttered, widely

,
quence of love, 2 Thess. 2. 10. ai
02, famed, Olym. 6. 155.

,
, ,,
those love feasts which the early
Christians celebrated as the token of their

,
love to Christ and to each other.
6, loving courage, brave.
II. v. 756. ,,,, ,
Heb.
293,
.3\
fire
beacon-fire.
f.
,
6, a Persian courier, a carrier,

agar,
doing the

I engage a courier
office

hire
Agam.
of a courier,

, ,
r\, ov, Dor.

,
of love, lovely, satisfactory, desirable
deserving

a son who is loved as if no


one else exists to be loved, a loved, darling , a person to carry letters or goods, Mat. 5.
41. I engage myself as a
courier, serve as a porter or carrier.
,
, the office of a courier.
,,

, the stages through which


child, i. e. an only begotten son, Mat. 3.

-, ^, /,
19. scil. , it is sufficient the Persian courier rode.
,
)
a, ov, must be loved, it is ne- the station of a

\,
,
cessary to love or be loved.

409. 8.

Ay
adv. contentedly— gladly, Dem.

wo;,
roaring; xyxv,

hardly, scarcely, 491. 3.
ovv, contr.
sively, rapid,
,
, 6, q,

,
,
ow, flowing exces-
psa,
high-sounding
Od.
II.

o.
,. 30.

97.
sea, loudly
courier— a relay, Herod. 8. 97.

of
Mat.
II.

nister,
1 Cor.
3. 3.
a. 334.
Rev.
1L
,
6, (probably another form

a courier, messenger, delegate,


Herod.
—a

10,
2. 1.
1. 99. 11. 10.— herald,

delegate of God, angel


18. /flt

on account of the
mi-
, —
angelb,
9
on account of powerful and lawless
i. e.
men supposed to be possessed and actuated
,, , ,
man, Herod.
,, message-bearing, news-
10

, ,,
1. 120.
by evil angels. The posterity of Cain hav- 02, , , a vessel,
ing forsaken Jehovah, and presuming on Od.
basket, . 289.— a tub, pail, pan.
their longevity, pretended to be Gods, or, Ion. ,, a vessel of any
in the language of Moses,

26.
began to call
themselves by the name of Jehovah, Gen. 4.
The descendants of these are called
, ,.,.
sort,
4. 2.
a cistern, tub, cask, sack, &c. Herod.

,

a basket,
body, the veins.
vessels of the

by the same inspired writer sons of the


Gods, Gen. 6. 1. which phrase in Hebrew
is precisely the same with sons of God or
angels, Job 1. 6. From this ambiguity arose
the doctrine of angels having fallen from
God by falling in love with the daughters
of men ; which means of course that as
,
,,
for

, ,
,, ,
438.
f.g^aor.
gather gather money, collect,
I
beg, borrow, Hec. 615. Od. f. 285.
ther men, summon, II. 129.
ga-

them call together, .


and by sync,

— for

let

am gathered gather myself, assemble, Od.


1.

. 385. gather for myself, v. 14. aor. 2. m.


.

,, , -
they were incorporeal spirits, and as such
incapableofcommercewith flesh and blood, they assembled, II.
they entered the bodies of men, and thus . 245. aojr. 1. pass, for
rendered them impure and violent. The they were assembled, II. a. 57. pluper.

,
seventy translators call the wicked men, they had collected
for
thus designated by Moses, angels. Hence
we may conclude, this designation became
current and intelligible among the Helle-
nistic Jews ; and the Apostle very properly
adopted it to avoid the use of invidious
,
II.

,
themselves, or assembled, II. . 211.
6n, for
.
gathered itself, recovered,
152. Heb. "UK, agir.
I gather, imp.
assembled themselves, 304.II. .
they

and irritating epithets. His meaning is to


this effect : " The tyrants and oppressors
of old, who go under the name of ' sons , , ,,
Arist. Poet. p. 28.
, ij,
the raising or levying an arnry,

the action of assembling or

,
of gods, or angels,' laid violent hands on gathering, to make the
those females that came within their view. collection of an army, to collect, raise an
For this reason let every woman wear a
veil in public, lest she should expose herself
to some such persons in the present day,
who by force or intrigue, by wealth or ,, . -
,
army, Herod.

forlorn, Prom. 270. a


,
7. 48.
6, jj, having no neighbour,

a herd, flock, troop, crowd


q,
priv.

power, may lead her astray. The caution


I now give is peculiarly necessary in such
a place as Corinth, where the women are
deemed preeminently beautiful, where de- ,
of friends, Att. 3. 11. 5.— society, Luc. 2.
267.

,
adv. from the flock.
<W, adv. in a flock or troop, U. <. 160.
f. aaos, I gather in crowds or

,
baucheries prevail even to a proverb, and droves,

,
I herd.
where men of opulence and rank collect a, ov, living in herds, gregarious,
— .

,
from all parts of the world to procure II. -. 846. unsubdued by the yoke, II.

, .,
women by money or violence, and carry 728. wild, loose —
ordinary, vulgar.
,
,
them away." see Anacreon. Od. s. 32. and ov, 6, or , a go-
the word
,
vernor of a flock, a shepherd.

,
.—
, &,
, ,
,
,
news,
12.

Tvhcc
II.
,
.
5j,

embassy, called also

.
Tydeus on an embassy.
,
Ion.
787. commandment,

<,
II..
, a message,
^^, - i.
John

e.

884, they sent


or
15.
f.

,
sj,
I superintend a flock.
an epithet of Minerva, be-
cause she protected those under her care,
as a shepherd does his flock, watchful,
.. 128.
ov, 6, }, having no genealogy

,
f. p. aor. viyy&tha, or origin, said of a man whose parentage
I act as a messenger, bring information, —
cannot he traced a high priest, without a
father in a human sense, God in regard to

, ,.
announce, tell, declare, fut.
part, for about to tell, in order his office being his only parent, Heb. 7. 3.

,
,
for
,
to announce,

, , , ,,,
,
aor.
optat.oV
1.

,,
II. . 398.
let
declared,
them proclaim, 517.
II. . 439. Mo\.

who might tell,Od.o.457.


a mandate, message,
Att. a priv.
ov,
A.
and
family, ignoble,
6,

2. 6. 15.
beardless, youthful,

,,not born of good


mean, unmanly,
a priv.

'>],Thuc. 7. 74.

messenger, herald, Cal.


ov, 6, fern.
4. 21 .
, a
meanness, pusillanimity,
mean, scil.
more
the
mean, obscure and illiterate persons, opp.
,
— — —— — —

,,
11
,,
,
, ,
to
or children

.
150. 10.
and
1 Cor.


nerously without
fr. priv.
xg, , the want of
1. 28. —
without family
adv. meanly, unge-
spirit, sluggishly,
and
Dem. crifice,

,,
as holy,

,
which is
f.

John
I set apart for sacred pur-
poses, consecrate, purify

Pet. 3. 15.
1
17. 19.

made holy, the sanctuary,



offer a pure sa-
—venerate
, § -
or regard
that

, , noble birth, meanness, pusillanimity.

pensed. priv.
,
II.

,,
119. ,,
, ij, unrewarded, unrecom-

q, (for
.
from x
one who has §,
in
holy things,

your hearts

, —
1 Pet. 3.
your very hearts by ha-
let
bitual purity be consecrated to God. ov 6
whom God hath set apart,
1 5, sanctify God

, ,,
augment, } said of
the precedence, or carries away the prize) ordained, endowed, John 10. 36.

,
^,
proud, insolent, haughty, daring, noble, il-
lustrious, glorious,
ass, Luc. 2.

,,
608.
pride, arrogance, luxury.
Nem. 6. 58. — ferocious
ye were purified or reformed, 1 Cor. 6.11.
perf. pass, is made holy is con-

verted to a holy life by means of his tvife,


1 Cor. 7. 14. perf. part,

,,
made

,
adv. insolently, haughtily.
3
holy, purified or reformed, Heb. 10. 10.
, ,
, 6, an epithet of Pluto, as
bringing all men to himself. ". —
tity
6, purification, holiness, sanc-

the medium or author of attaining

- ,
, «j, having no taste, insipid
having not tasted unexperienced,

, ,
, —
thou shalt be tasteless of no-
thing, shalt taste, relish every thing, . ,
moral purity, 1 Cor. 1. 30. the purifying

,
influence, 2 Thess. 2. 13.
f. ~, I expiate, appease by means of

, ., ,
sacrifice, (Ed. C. 1495.
2. 1. 23. x priv. -/. rig, '/}, holiness, sanc-

,
wonder, admiration, Od. y. 227. 2 Cor.

,
Ayi, tity, purity,

,
>?<", aj, 7. 1.

envy, from or f. I purify, Bacch. 74. —per-

,
Ay*i, m> h, a fracture, from
r
break form religious rites, celebrate, Heb. 12. 10.

. \, ,, ,
,
broken rocks, a shore, Apoll. 1. 554. xg, vj, purification, ceremony.

/, ,
,
, ,
, , ,,
f.

5. 72. (Ed. T. 402. xyog,


Dor. for
led, a band, agmen, A. 11. 9.
/,
,,
1 expel a criminal, Herod.

, an army
,
for

in the arms, II.


I
I invoke.
the arms.
xi,
227.
hold,
.
lift, embrace
for

in my

,
Ay

,, ,
intrepid,
6, q, Dor.

Pyth. 10. 27. xyxv,


,, courage, manliness,
— magnificence—rage, Paul. 35.
manly, bold,
spirited— splendid, magnificent,
,.
Sil.
11.^. 46.

-/, ,,
arms, imp.
their arms, II. . 722.

adv. for
upon, over, Agam. 3.

,,
,
,,
in the arms, Eum. 80.
far on high,
for xxt
they conveyed in

and
ov, contr.
ov,

subject to decay, immortal, imperishable,



Hippol. 1114. never fading glory, Pyth.

,.
2. 96.
Ayng, or
fane,
priv. ynoxg.
ayyig,
free
,

, , wicked, impious, pro-


also
from old age, not

, ,-,
, ,,,
xy-AxkYi,

bait,
or
Od.
Tig,


\
I fish with a hook
ng,
],

aj,
v), an arm.

bear in my arms, wield, en-


I
counter embrace, Meleag. 23.
a fishing-hook,
369. Theo. 21. 57.

more commonly
,,
xg, fishing.
,
Aywiyfiopg, ,
6, ij, leading the dance, a the organs by which we hasten or perform
leader of the chorus, Pyth. 1 . 6. ay , - a thing, the arms, II. f. 213.
, -) Ay -, for xvxzktvu, I bend, incline, II. .
assembly.
Aynrog, ov, (the same in sense with

, , ,.
worthy to be admired, admirable, II.
— enviable.
371. . ,
, ,,
,
113.
,,
-Ahivxg, having opened,

,
a valley, dale, II.
a small valley, ravine.
156.
190.
..
.

02,,,,
'
for one who guides, , a string or cord to bind with,
a leader, guardian, from
02, , ov, appropriated to sacred pur-
poses, devoted to God, and in consequence
free from stains of vice, holy, pure, 1 Cor.
/
a clasp, from

made, chariot
97,
I strangle.

ov, crooked, bent, curved.


II. . 39, a crooked, a firmly

,.,
adv. crookedly,

,
7. 34. The early Christians
because under the influence of the
were called in a bent form.
xyxvhyi, ng, jj, an arm or knee from its ca-

,
Gospel they refrained from the impurities

, pacity to bend— a javelin hurled by means of

,,
which debased the rest of mankind. To
that which is holy, the holy place,
Mat. 24. 15. xyix, holy things, rx
the holy of holies, Heb. 9. 3.
adv. holily, in a holy manner. ,a strap girt about the body a sort of cup
used in the pastime called the cottabos
the arms of the sail-yard athong,
a loop, K. 6. 1.
f. or ,, I

~* —
—— — — — I — — .

,
13 14
grasp in my arms— hurl a javelin by means comely, delicate, Pyth. 4. 146. beautiful
of a strap girt to the middle.

<,
,,
a small buckler in the form
of a half moon, called also see Plut. . ,
.,
splendid trees, tall, majestic, Olym. 2. 133.
— splendid man, renowned, glorious, xv-

', ,
1. 274. hence anale.

, , Ion. splendour,

,
,
,
using a strong bow,

Od. .
,
,
, crooked in thought,
having thoughts that are winding and per-
plexed, and therefore not to be explored,
inscrutable, ..
,
eg, tog,

538. eagle-beaked.
59.
having a crooked bow,
II. .
.
848. .
having a crooked beak,


,
magnificence

aor. 1.
,
.
510, trusting to his elegance,
II.

conscious of his superior beauty and fleet-


ness— preeminence, Olym. 13. 18.
ment, crest, insolence, Od. . 244.
, one of the graces.
f. , I
,
render
(for xyhxiy)

,
brilliant,
for
— orna-
-

adorn,
sup-
make crooked, bend
',, plied this ornament for thee, Theo. Ep.

,
I

,
f. 1

, ,
hurl or wing a javelin by means of a strap
girt to the middle
having crooked talons.

,
", —
,
, the action of bending,
',, exult,
Olym.
liancy,
1.
i.
22,
e.
I am

he excels even
adorned, adorn myself,
xxt

the brilliant accomplishment,


in the bril-

,
curvature the hurling of an arrow. of music, future Att. for
ou, hurled, Bacch. 1203. that you will exult, glory in,
,
ij, an anchor, anchora. This II. x. 331.

,^»,^,, ,
Homer calls svuv, II. x. 436, as the means ,,, having graceful limbs,

!/,
of giving repose to a ship,
to cut off the anchor, i. e. to
finely formed, Nem.
ov,
7. 5.
having beautiful trees, or

^ , ,
depart speedily without taking time to raise fine groves, Olym. 9. 30.
,

,
it or to cast an- , v\, seated on splendid
chor or to thrones, splendidly seated, said of the
weigh anchor, ride at anchor muses, Olym. 13. 136.

. ., , ,
Isthm. 6. beautifully situated,
18. — to
sperity.
cast
fortune, to arrive at the
An
anchor in the extremity of

anchor is the means of stabi-


lity to a ship: hence it means firmness,
security, and the anchor of the mind is a
well grounded faith, Heb. 6. 9. The last
summit of pro-

,
,
,
Nem.

splendid
,
Od. y\. 115. having a fine
fruit,
hand, handsome, Nem. 3. 97.
,
6, q, having fine young men,

said of Corinth, Olym. 13. 5.


, rendering a
6, , bearing luxuriant or

.)
anchor is the last resource, or the last xy~h splendid, feast

, ^, ,
hope, Hecub. 29. and is also called the sa-
cred anchor, Luc. 2. 698.
" - grand music, Olym. 3. 10.
, , , wearing a splendid

- -, ,
(scil. Dem. robe, Call. 1. 11. of Thetis.
said
. he does not moor on the same , , having a splendid tri-

,
anchor—

, ,
, .
does not swim in the same bottom
with the multitude.

^ -,
not suffer them to moor on two anchors
to have two means of safety, that in case
one should fail, the other might remain.
,,a anchor.
ys/\b'

,, Dem. 1295.
ult. do
dent,

^,
fully,
scil.

0. 8. 3.
,
Neptune,

shining face, blazing, (Ed. T. 213.
,—
,Olym.having a
unpleasant, bitter, sad.

,
less cheer-
,
, , without
a tongue, not
7. 64.

, , little

,,, », ,
I anchor a person, i. e. I having a free use of the tongue speech- —
^,
f.

floor, supplant him, Equit. 262. less, ineloquent. a barba-

, .. ,.
ct;, , the grasp or hold of an rous land, Trach. 1060. opp. to Greece, as
anchor, .
Supp. 773. civilized and adorned with letters,
ov, not to be bent, inflexible,
6, the bending of the arm,


an elbow the arm, Olym. 2. 149. Nem. 5. inexorable, Prom. 162. ,
76. udxns etyxaits&trt falling in the

,
not having the nap worn
ov, off,


arms of victory the angle or corner of a new patch, Mat. 9. 1 6. ,
02, , , , chaste— chaste
,,,.
,
'
wall, II. 702. a valley, Ajax, 816. yi,

I fold in my arms, embrace, feast, holy —


chaste grove, sacred— chaste
wind about as a stream.
02,
did
rich,
tuater,
costly,
illustrious, noble,
x, ou,

bright,
II.
splendid.
clear
x. 23.
.


splendid gifts,
splendid children,
871. — splendid
—splen- — chaste
hair,
in mind, undefiled, unpolluted, Orest. 1 640.

blameless,

/, , ,
the purest water, Pyth.
in
1
conduct or character,
Pet. 3. 2.

chastity, purity.
1. 41.
, pure,
— — — — — —— —

,
15

, , f.

— render chaste, Eur. Elect. 654.


I am chaste, . Supp. 234.

, .1592. — destitute of children. •,,\\. .


16

, , ,).-.
40. a priv.
, freedom from profhneness,
aj,

(Ed. T. 863.—freedom from pol-


ov, 6, 9], without lamentation, unla-
mented, Septem, 1074.
sanctity,

,,, , (from a place where


(, , —
lution, chastity, purity.

,
rites,
James

,
purify
f.

expiate
4.

from, Num. 6. 3.
8.
I purify by means of religious
purify the heart, sanctify,

I
it is necessary to
purify myself, abstain
people gather to buy and sell, a market
place ' to be of the market,

—,
i. e. to be one of the rabble or mob, Equit.

181. — a place where men met to administer


,
purified hy justice, a court of judicature, forum as-

, ,, •,
,
a vow, Acts 24. 18. sembly, council, from the

, ,' -,
,

, , market or forum
to, 6, purifica- to an assem-
tion, expiation, Eum.
327.
, bly, or the forum ?), in the assembly.

,
ov, flowing with a pure stream, f. in the market, I
I traffic

Prom. 433.

,
pea. buy, opp. Equit. 1370. purchase.
f. \, I do not know, am igno- I buy for myself, procure, A.
rant of. to forget them- 1. 3. 14.

,
, , ,,
Dem. purchase, traffic.
selves,
,, » 151. 7.

,, 958. 4.
ov, 6,

,
a thing purchased,
merchandise, goods, Dem. 909. 27.
aor. optat. iEolic, if you do not know
1. a, ov, belonging to the market,
this, namely, that credit or confidence is mean, vile, vulgar, a

,
of all sources the greatest source of wealth, vulgar taunt, Pax, 749.

,
you may be ignorant of every thing, i. e.
you must be very stupid.

,
^,
ny
f. •,
I do not know, aor. 1. ovV
nor was Juno ignorant, II. a. 537.
\,
market friendship, friendship like goods
bought and sold, i. e. interested friendship,

,
Arist. Ethic.
depraved men who
the low,
8. 13.
frequented the market.

,
,,
he would know, Od.
,
pres. optat. for


a. 217.
or ayvoioi,

,
a soul having
nothing mean or vulgar, Luc. 1. 737. be- —

,,,,
dence—delinquency,
q, ignorance

to,
sin.
oversight, impru-

oversight, error.

- ,
longing to the forum, judicial, forensic.
ov, an epithet of Jupiter or Mer-
cury, as having a statue erected to them

• ,, , ,
6, oj,

,'
senseless,

unexpert in, in the market, Valck. ad Am. p. 9.

,
ignorant, unfeeling, in- ov, 6, an officer or magistrate
human. — ungrateful, '
who regulated the concerns of the market
— absurd, perverse, unjust judge, a priv. at Athens, an overseer or clerk of the
market — an aedile. f. \, I
or f. \, f. I am an officer who regulates the market.

/, .

, ,.,,
act absurdly or wrongfully, Dem. 249.
decide unjustly, E. 1. 7. 10.
,
ult.
trate who
,
, the office of a magis-
regulated the market.
,
,
perverseness— impru- I speak in the forum,

) ,
vj,

— —
,
dence, 31. absurd notion or harangue, address, plead relate, declare,
folly,
suspicion, A. 2. 5. 2. —ingratitude, iEschin.
I
tell. aor. 1. m. for -/,
c.

,, . .
as to
,
Ctes. §

,
,
tj.

adv. absurdly, perversely, un-


gratefully, Polyb. 25. 2. 2. eif (for

hope? Dem. 25. IS.


; are you so absurd

, sj, one who does not know,


he harangued, spoke
imperf.

bly, II. 3. 230.

.
for you ex-
pressed yourselves, declared to the assem-
for
spoke deliberating among themselves,
they
to them, II. a. 73.

11.

,
well

,
1. aor. 1. pass. part,

ignorant unknown, obscure, uncertain, spoken of, publicly applauded or celebrated,

-, ,
,
(Ed. T. 681. a priv. opp. Isthm. 1. 71.

, ,,ov, unknown, Acts 17. 23.

, ,
recognised, a stranger to
not
reveal,
f.

announce, a. 109.
I tell, relate, II. a. 385.

(», inf.

,
,,
Olym. 6. 113, a voice that
not to falsify.
,
blindness, infatuation,

,
for ,
I
ignorance

do not know,
did not know him, Od.
Dem.
of,

,
Time.

,, ,,
,
1412.
8.
8.

-J/.
knows

66. —
Ion.
95.
10. imp.
for
for
told, deliberated or held an assembly, 788.
ov, 6, a person that speaks in the
forum, an orator, pleader, II. a. 248.
, the art of speaking, oratory,
to tell, II. /?.

harangued,

, ,, , ,
adverb of chastely, eloquence, Od. S. 168.

, ,,,
to be pure,
ov, o,
Ar.
ij,
3. 8. 10.
unborn, Phoen.
ov, 6, a leader, chief,
or
II. . 647.

pollution, impurity,
— — — — ——
17
,
,,
18

,
,
,
,
abomination, Septem, 1019. Antig. 262.

,
,
, ,,,
425.

, ,

expiation sanctity, reverence.
,
o, the hand clenched, grasp, II.


arm, bosom, Anthol. 1. 139.
6,

recorded, Antig. 460.


jj,

ov,

ov, unwritten,
,
illiterate, opp. to
a priv.
unwritten

un-
— not engraved or
cruel

542. .
,
, , , having a
speaking, Od.

fierce

6,

,
294.
, , , savage-looking,
man—
woman
6, wild, fierce

,
S.

fierceness.

— wild wood,
adv. fiercely, cruelly, Prom. 155.
having a house in the
country rustic, clownish, uncouth rude,
fierce voice,


Bacch.

written laws, i. e. not written by art, but inexperienced, awkward,

, - avr/, a

,
,,
impressed or dictated by nature, Dem. 317. countryman, a clown, iN'ubes, 47.
23. —
,
undefined, or not ordained by law,
Luc. 2. 532.
,,
the erasing the name of a
unpolished, or a country life, 43.

surly
/iu, scil. rustic in anger, fierce,
adv. rudely, awkwardly,

,
debtor from the public record before the clownishly.seeTheophr.Char^.f/^jjay^o/-

,,
debt is paid. An action brought against a xot-oov qu unless this was too peasant-

),
, ,
person for this crime was called
Dem. 1338. 19.
like, too foolhardy, to be said.

,
r„ rusticity, rudeness, Theo.
Char.

,
imperative of (for 4.

, ,
rouse thyself, be up, II. s. 765.

,
hasten, see note on Od. v. 149.
a:, Ion.

,
,
jj, hunting, a chase
tic,
,,
clownish - athletic
living in the country, rus-

countrymen or peasants, II. .


or ,
^

,
a thing hunted, game, booty, a draught
of fishes, Luke 5. 4.
548. 675. rude, Od. . 85.
a, ov, comp. cf rustic, wild,

, ,
rod. 2. 95.

,
A.

, ,, , ,,
f.

— ensnare, Mark
- ,,,
5. 3. 9.
swot,

captured,
I catch by hunting, capture
12. 13.
wild beasts,
for
$>,
caichfishes, He-
II.

tress,
. 486.— rural, Eur.
,,
Equit. 651.
a title

inheriting land
— a magistrate who settled
Elect. 168.
of Diana as a hun-

and residing

,
caught, Dalz. Collec. 2. 329. in the country
to, a booty, Aw. 3. 1-1.7. disputed boundaries between neighbours

a huntsman,
, ,, —
fisher, Theo. 21.

6.
ajgeg•, rustic nymphs, Od. . 106.
vage animals, Agam. 146.

—wild, sa-

,, ,
r„ ov, fit for, or skilled in, hunt- , a a rustic,
— clownish man, Orest. 127. —wild,
ing
brave, warlike, 4. 1 2..
capable of making the enemy a prey,

-
Eur. Elect. 463.
fierce,

"ht;

— —
,
, a field— country, opp. to
a farm, plantation, colony, Od. S. 5.
villages, Od. |. 263.
&,from , ;, , a
country, Theo.
I hunt after,
an inhabitant of the
6, rustic,
25. 51.
, a peasant, Rhes. 266.— hunts-
Od. . 53.

^
the field or country, in the field or 6,

,,, , , -,
in the country. man, free-booter, Hercul. F. 377.
a shepherd, night watch wild, — toe, a species of grass, of which

,
jj,

Od. . 90.

(, , , )
fierce, Bacch. 1186. II. *. 1 55, cattle are fond, dog's grass,

.
an ox that feeds at large unbroken to the 6, , one who risesfrom sleep,

,, ,
yoke, and therefore fat and strong,
f. \,
a night watch, Luke 2. 8.
I tarry in

a, ov, belonging to the coun-



wild ass, untamed— wild beast,
the fields,

,
keep ful, diligent,
Prom. 358.

Mark
for

f.
incessant.
,, I
vigilant, watch-
Theo. 24. 104.— wakeful bolt,

am
— exercise care and
watchful, I watch,

,
try, wild 13. 33. vigilance,

'/——
,.
fierce wild fruits, uncultivated, opp. to Heb. 13. 17.

,
wild manners, uncivilized, rustic,
savage, opp. to

,,^'
,
1. 6. 19.

, a wild olive, a barrentree,


Rom. 11.17. hence the proverb,

,,
than awild olive.
wild, rude, clownish.
- lead
to ,—
, ,
,,
was unable to sleep, Herod. 3. 129.
,,'/], a broad way, street, from

as the
watchfulness, vigilance.
was held in wakefulness,

to
a line of houses, see II. f. 64 2. opposed
houses of a city are to its

, , ,,
r,, ov,

,,
ness,

perate,
furious,
Dem.
f.
808. 15.
I
wildness, rusticity

render wild,
I am become
— fierce-
irritate, exas-
wild or
fortifications.

9. 52.
,
"He broke through
the city
of Troy and desolated its inhabitants"
abode of the dead, the grave, Olyra.

6, a title of Apollo as guardian


Orest. 226, how
wild or haggard thou art of the street, his statue being erected
become by thy long want oi* cleanliness ! |
Phoeniss. 634.
C
— —— — —

, ,
19
$, , , , too;, scil. an altar dedi- , — ,, propin-
SO

, .,
cated to Apollo, Ion. 168. quity, the rights of propinquity,

in,

, -, ,^
KyvfAvct+oc,
. 1 . 6.
,
1
6,
9.
, undisciplined, unskilful
adv. without
Ruth Dem. 1051. 7.
4. 6.
or n, ov, standing one

,,
exercise or discipline, to on another, crowded, in heaps, II. . 361.
be uninured, Aw. 2. 1.6. priv. ov, near turning, ready to turn,
,
the want of discipline, versatile, fickle, new measures, Herod. 7.

,
tj,

-.
,inexperience, neglect, Ranse, 1119. want
of cultivation, Arist. Ethic, y. 5.
, , from ,
, a collection, as-
1 3.

upon, Lye. 729.

, -
, . on the
If{>. 10. 7.
limits, bordering

,
semblage,
circle or squadron of the ships, II.

,, ,
141.
aheap— congregation, council, Od.y. 31.
, one who causes persons to
gather round him, a conjurer, mounte-
in the assembled
.
,
,,,
the temple, Herod.

of
super, of

a, ov, nearer,
Herod. 7.
2.

175.
very near.
very near, adjoining
169.
more close to, comp.

-
,.,
bank, Rhesus, 503. a quack. — , nearly like or equal,

, ,, , ,
f. ,,
collect money by begging,
or exhibiting feats, Od. r. 284. Thuc. 4. 134.
a drawn battle, Luc. 1. 751.

, ,-, , ,, , .
,
adv. near, f. p. I stop the breath
nigh, at hand, opp. to — near in by compressing the throat, I strangle, II.
form, like, comp. for super. y. 371.— stop the voice.
nearest, next, m, v> strangulation, hanging, Polyb.

, , ,
Herod.

,, , ,
combat, opp. to
9. 81, very near the altar
, 6, one who
— very like.
fights in close
a skirmisher, II.
12. 16.
with,
f. I

a noose or cord to hang

break, bruise, shatter, aor.

,
,
&,
v. 5.

, . ,
.,
, ,
.
ov,
1. 2.

near the sea, maritime.


ov,

,
604.
fit

13.
for close combat, scil.
1.

298.
dual,
inf.
\...
ships so as to cause
to break, II.
they dashed the
to wreck, Od. y.
them
178. part,
having snapped, or caused to
.

, . for

, , ,, ,
deep near the shore, preci- snap, II. 40. fut. inf.
-. 111. aor. 2. pass.

,
pitately deep, Od. e. 413. deep about to fell wood, II.

broke to pieces, was

,
places, Poiyb. 4. 41. 6. Att.

,
godlike, Od.

., , -
- .
,
6, ij, near or like to the gods,

529.
,
s. 35.
coming nigh, near, adverbi-
near, at hand,
shivered, II. y. 367.

I break, burst,
for
barbs were forced back, . 214.

break, shatter the wood, II.


the

they (two)
148. .
,, '.ally, II.

,, ,
a. 352.

,
prompt
,
,, , , , -
.
6, , having the mind or thoughts

ever at hand, quick-minded, sagacious,


— inventive,
1 .

,,
4. 3.
quickness of mind, sagacity
-
a
am broken or shattered, part,
felled trees,
f.

I lead
p.
II. . 769. wrecked ships.
Att.
—lead a person, conduct— lead
thing, bring, carry,
troduce—lead out, bring forth, publish
convey— lead
and

in, in-

\, — skill on the pipe, Polyb. 1 5. 34. 4. lead under judgment or censure, refer to,

,, a guardian,
, ,
near the city, present as
Septem,
507.
y, ov, super, of the obs. , interpret, Polyb. 27. 13. 13.— lead orc a
thing taken in hand,
keep, hold, fox ,
continue, maintain,
he holds in es-
_

,§ -nearest, very near, at hand, CEd. T. 819.


adverbially very near, very like

sleep is very like death.


,
Plut. 6. 408, ),
timation
myself.

lead on the way, I go, convey
In such instances the reciprocal
pronoun is understood, A. 4. 2. 20. John
11. 7 —lead on the time, pass, spend— lead
6, a near neighbour, the near-
est relative, and, as such, one who paid
the necessary duties to the deceased, and
on afeast, celebrate— lead away living things
as a booty, in contradistinction to
which means to carry away inanimate things,
,
succeeded to his rights, an avenger, heir, I plunder —
lead men under ride, govern,

-,
Ruth 3. 12. see Valck. ad Am. p. 4. Dem. 617. 27.— lead up children, train,

,, ,,
,
est kin.

from
in addition to that of my pro-
tector, Agam. 1078.
f. I am near, I am the near-

the priesthood.
I claim exemption
from office by virtue of consanguinity, ny-
wnvuwetu, Esdr. 2. 62, tli.ey were set aside
,
,
for ijye, led away, II.
aor. 2.

, ,
,
educate, see Arist. Ethic, a. 4. imp. «jyoy.
841. II. . 429.

away, II. a. 764. aor. 2. optat.


took me

I wish a god would lead him, Od. g.


subj.
duce, II. . 1 55. fut.
243.
for ayavu, should intro-
for
.
,,
U. /. 429,
— — —

21

\ ,
I will not

, ,
for
a r
by any means take him away.
future in the seme of the
imperative, take away, Od. . 622. inf.
,
,,, ,
,,
/, f. p.
bat, encounter, contend, fight, strive earn-
I
22
com-

,, ,
estly, Luke 13. 34. Ion. for
fnt. poet, were fought, Herod. 9. 26.
. 668. and 50. aof. 2. Dor. act, perform as actors.
,,
,
11.

for to carry, Pyth. 4. 98.


, -, conflict, race, Thuc. 5. 50.

,
, ,.
imperat. lead, take
used adverbially, well, come,
and
aor. 1.

-,, I am
away

^,.- II. x. 62.

led, I lead or direct



ay,

,,
necessary to combat, must
it is

strive or contend, 1.6. 9.


xtoc, to,
70, a combat, conflict, encounter

.
struggle,
, Thuc.

.
7.

,
myself lead for myself awife,\ marry am competition a horse-race, pleading, 8.

, ,
led to punishment for a crime, Luke 23. 22.
—am led away by desires, am captivated.
2. 13.— exploit, Eur. Elect. 987.— dispute,
Phoen. 1364.

, ,,
,
away, imp.
Ion. for ccya,

were carrying or collecting wood, II.

Od. . 294.
for
inf. ,, for
I
for ,,
lead, take, carry,

,
they conducted, led,
to
they
a. 784. -,
-•/],
, a combatant— a
, to combat,
6,

— a pleader, Plut. 56.— an

,,,., - fit
6.

style or diction fitted for de-


bate, Arist. Rhet. 3. 11. 16.
,
champion
actor.
athletic, "

,
lead, to bring to, 213. v. 6, one who appoints the

2. 175.
,

, a leader, conductor, Herod.
a thong or halter by which a
combats, president or umpire of the games,

horse is guided, Polyb. 3. 43. 4.


uyay/i, \, ij, leading —
carriage, conveyance
,
also called

f. ,,
I preside in the games,
— the road in which a thing is conveyed appoint the combats, adjudge the prize
the mode of bringing up children, educa- instigate to fight, Jos. Antiq. 17. 3. 1.

,tion —
amusement, Plut. 9. 96. the train-
ing of trees— an appeal or law-suit, Polyb.
12. 16. 4.
yi, ov,

conduct.
easy to be led, liable to be

.,
2,
raise sedition.

learnt,
gar —
xbx/ic,
$.
, , ,
not having
unlearned, untaught vul-
unknown, Hes. u. 654. neg.
,

,
arrested and taken before a magistrate or
into prison, E. 7. 3. 7. ,,
things sorrow, i.
see Herod. 90. insensible of
5.
e. rendering a person insensible

, , ,
,
to be conveyed, things with which wag- to sorrow, a soother of sorrow, Philoct. 849.
gons or ships are loaded,
a load to be conveyed.

,, ,to, and , '., ,, -


xc, y, a load,
^^,, 6, '^unskilled in, unacquainted

with, ignorant of, Herod. 8. 65. II. . 634.

. 6. 1. 28. —
battle, trial, Dem. 1467. 14.
, the gymnastic games,

,,
- ,-,, ,
allurement, attraction.
, a combat, game, conflict,

, , , 6, Od. a. 243.
or
v\,

knowledge, ignorance, unskilfulness.

un- ,
, , want of
y, tearless,
the funeral games,
bats in which the victor had the honour
of being crowned,

,
.
com-

sports
, '
pitying, Theo.

,
24. 31.un-
relenting resolution, Med. 861. without
tears or sorrow,
,
Olym. 2. 120.

,
attendant on the public festivals, , tearless, unweeping,

, ,\,
6, un-
a horse or chariot race the place — relenting, . 415.

,
II.

cf combat, the circus, II. 448. 451. . unsoftened with sorrows, Troad. 603.

, 6, a hard stone, adamant,


the place in which the Grecian ships were
stationed to combat the Trojans, II. o. 428. diamond. Cycl. 592, a
— the assembly who viewed the combat, heart of adamant.

,, ,
II. .• I. —
assembly of the gods, i\. 298. n, ov, of adamant, indissolubly

,the games, umpire,


6, a president or steward- of

/,
Ajax, 574.

,
hard, adamantine, Prom. 6.

,, ,
adamant-bound, indisso-

, . -
,
ov, of a combat, consisting in, or Prom. 148.
~<,
luble.
springing from, a conflict,
Olym. 10. 74, means

Isthm. 5. 9.
, ,
from the combat— toilsome, hazardous,
glory

,, II. /.
, }, untamed, unsubdued
unsubdued by prayers, implacable,
, , 158.

—without
6, ,
neg.
not spending, or causing

,, charge, 1 Cor. 9. 18.


xyovjix, Ion. q, \, a conflict of expense
mind, anguish, distress, agony, Luke 22. 44.

%\. adv. without expense
fear, alarm.
am am -,
or

,
loss, gratuitously, Orest. 1176.

,,
f. I in agony, di- ov, undistributed, undivided, neg.
stressed, greatly dread, Polyb. 1 20. 6. I Ajax, 54.
>,, , ,
.

struggle for, Arist. Rhet. 1. 9. 21. and fearless, un=


C 2
— — —— — —— —

23
daunted,
bold, impudent,
^-:,
II.

,
117, safe, secure
.4.81.—, adv. with-
r,.
,
, ,
II. .
A I

having had enough of fa-


98,
tigue, i.e. exhausted, enervated with fatigue.
24

,
,) ,
, ,
out fear, in safety,
more

protection
boldly, Thuc. 6. 91.
fearlessness, intrepidity,
safety, security,

—, privilege, Dem.
with less fear,

{a neg.
(Ed.C. 439,
525. 2.
02,
-
or
tiety,
enough, abundantly, to sa-
completely,
on,
obscure, indistinct
rious, hidden, ,
II. r.

not manifest, opp. to

, is ob-
423. Prom. 587.

— uncertain —inglo-
that which
-
, . bold, Isthra. 1.
o, ,
13.—
unterrified, undaunted,
adv. with-
scure, obscurity

, ,,
adv. not mani-
festly, imperceptibly— with doubt or un-

-,
02,
out fear or alarm,

less, A.

,
1.
oy, o,

10. 11.
sj,

unbribed, unbiassed, Arist.


ov,
a neg. .
without supper, supper-
certainty,
not doubtful.

uncertainty,
,'/), and
, 1 Cor. 9. 28, as

,', obscurity,
I Tim.
.

, , ,, ,-)
Ethic, 9. p. 89. a, Ssxo£a. 6. 17, in theuncertainty of wealth, i.e. wealth

same womb,
ther , for and
, (one of the
a bro-
brothers and sisters per-
sons united in friendship, profession or
sentiments, brethren. It is used sometimes
,
.?)

the value of which is mistaken, and the con-
tinuance uncertain, see Polyb. 36. 4. 2.
f. (from for
I am perplexed for want of knowledge, am

, , ,, .
distressed in mind, feel anguish, Mat. 26.

,as an adjective, similar, congenial, twin. .


, ,, ,
37. sc. 4.
with a brother's hands, 4. 3, to be heavy in heart, syn. with
Septem, 813.

,
and ou, not to be con-
/ vj, a sister tended with, irresistible, Prom. 105. not —

, , Luc.
815, a twin sister 2. subject to dispute adv. without

,
,
of the present accusation.

contr.
,
6, a brother's son, nephew.

jjc, '/), a niece.

n, ov, fraternal, Arist. Ethic, £. 10.


,
one who slays a ,
. ,,
, ,, ,
contention, indisputably.
, , or
ble place, fr. ,

,.
Dor.
to see) abode of the
dead, the grave, hell, Hades— Pluto, the
supposed king of the dead, for
(the invisi-

,
,
6,

, brother, a fratricide, Herod. 3. 65.

,
in the house of Pluto.
brotherhood, fraternity, one who eats ,

. ,
jj, and

,
,
1 Pet. 2. 17. to satiety, voracious, Theo. 22. 115.
,, without a body, unem-

,
y, ov, not ravaged or wasted by an
bodied,Theo. 5. 4. fr. or undaunted, 34. a neg.

,
1
enemy, Ay. 1.

,
for
», unbound,
bundle, Eur. Supp.
,,
22. without chains,
a loose
impassable, A. 2.' 1. 4.
ov,
ov, not to be blamed, blameless,
Arist. Ethic. 4. fr.. , , .
,
Thuc. 3. 34.

.
ov, indivisible, indissoluble.

,
,
,
, jj, without a voucher or
authority, unauthorized, without a pilot
not subject to the authority of another,
uncontrolled, independent,

anonymous without a ruler, said of the

,
world, Luc. 2. 761.
ov, untied, unbound, a neg.
, —
— ,
guishing
not

,
Rom.

litigious,

9. 2. ,
ov,
indistinct,
a
ov,
indiscriminating,

neg.
never
confused

perpetual,
adv. without in-
termission, incessantly, a neg.
failing,

.-
undistin-
—impartial,

.
ov, not to be reconciled, irre-

,
,, ,
)
free from chains, at large,

,
Od.
,
bitter

.
, -.
2.
,
op,
a
,
— unwelcome, Od. .
for

undressed, untanned, raw hide,


neg.
Dem. 75. 3.
unpleasant,
245. sad.
concileable, implacable, Dem. 100. IS.—

, adv. irreconcileably.
to be irreconcileable. a neg.

indissoluble, implacable.
ov,

,
'
f. p. (the same in sense implacably, Polyb. 18. 20. 4.
with and
, I please, decree.
Herod. 3. 58, it pleased them,
ov, not softened, unmoistened,

, - unyielding, rigid, invincible, Nem. 7. 107.


, ,,
i. e. they determined prefer, a sort of plant, so called be-
II. y. 173, that a cause the dew or rain is thrmvn off by the
wretched death had pleased me ! I wish I oily substance which covers it, true maiden
had preferred an ignominious death de- —
, ,
-,
hair, Theo. 13.41.
light, am an object of love, Theo. 17. 38.
— have enough, am satiated, aor. 1. optat.
Mo], Od. a. 134,
lest the stranger be disgusted with the
ieasl. perf. part, , or -
ov, untorn asunder, entire
adv. without a rent or fissure,
entirely, Ay. 1 4.

nated,
ov,
Dem.
. ,
uncorrupted, uncontami-
325. 14.
,
,,
..
— — — — — — —— —

,
.

,
25

,
, , freedom from
sincerity, purity, Tit. 2. 7.
ov, indifferent,
corruption,

unimportant, im-
,
, ,,,
when he is
useless,
8,
end
unfit for that
contemptible, yq
a land unfit for producing, barren.
— unqualified,
Heb.
26

6.

material

,
,
by any

a
— feeling indifference,
trifling
Plut. 10. 215, matter undistinguished
specific qualities.
,,
term by which
pain,

indifference, heedlessness,
the Stoics expressed their
heedless.

,
talker, trifler.
and , f.

idly, prate, trifle, O. 11. 3.

,
trifling talk,
,Theophr.
,
, , an idle
I converse
,
idle conversation, prate,

unmixed, unadulterated, 1 Pet.


Char. 3.

,,,. ,,,, , .
ov,
disregard to things good and bad, and re- 2. 1. Plut. 6. 364.— without guile, guile-

a, , .,
presented them as indifferent, Plut.

untaught— illiterate
6. 191. less,
— —
Olym. 7. 99. pure, sincere, genuine
adv. without adulteration or de-
with sincerity, unfeignedly.

,
6, vj, ceit,
unartificial.
— natural, Dem. 530. 13. ,
6, , having no celebrity, inglo-

,, , .
commanded.

pressible,
, , ,
.
,
adv. without instruction, un-

not to be expressed, inex-


6. 1. 16. ,
rious, opp. to
f.

HecUb. 294.
a neg.
I have no fame, am obscure,

, the want of ce-


lebrity, infamy, disgrace, Dem. 12. 19.
,

,
fraudulent,
.
ov,
opp. to
unjust, injurious, iniquitous,
—inadequate,
ov, not a subject of mere opinion,

but of science, intellectual, Plat. Dial. 225.

, , , . -,

, .
unfit, unequal,
adv. unjustly,

wrong,
, ,
.
§, ,
injustice, iniquity, violence,
fraud, opp. to or
fr.

>^,
II.

mind
,
.
,, satiety, plenty,
88, satiety came to his mind, his
became satiated, fr.

,f.

,
act contrary to the princi-
I
ples of justice and law, At. 1. 1. 1.

, , , , ,. ,

wrong wrong another, treat injuriously
hurt, molest, injure, A. 1.4. 9.
I am wronged
jury, to
do

or injured, receive an in-


the being injured, in-

,
, Nemesis, the daughter of
Jupiter and Necessity, vengeance, envy,

Prom. 934. fate, necessity, Plut. 6. 362.
, 6, ,
said of a slave, not disposed
to run away, attached to a master, faithful,
Plut. 6. 666. fr. ,

,
jury. to purchase , sc. also vj, ov,

, ,
injury
,
the not being injured,
and violence.

,
i.e. exemption from the Adriatic sea, Adriatic.
'02, , ov, grown to maturity, ripe,

,, , ., ?, . -
fence, injury, crime
ov,
tioned by law, Luc.

,
,
, an injurious deed, an

ov, condensed, swarming,

,, ,
— disgrace, Ion. 325.
untried, undecided,
2. 166.

abundant, Pyth. 6. 27. numerous,


Od. a. 92. ahvov a condensed (i. e.
,

unsanc-
of-

,
large, strong,
rod. 1.
— —
tough, opp. to
17.grown, robust
youth fat abundant, Herod. 4. 31.
Heb. lit*.
ov,
expressing the bold and sublime
one who

boldness and grandeur of thought,


is
ripe fruit,

successful in
He-

, ,
stout) heart,

316.
see
, ,, ,
Damm.

a fierce bite,
Pyth. 2. 97. intense, loud, II. . 510. .
adv. intensely, frequently,
997.
Long. §

robustness
.
and

857. Hes. ?. 473.


8.


y, maturity,
abundance, manly vigour, II.
,
ov,

,.
unregulated, unadjusted,

,
f. f.

.— I render strong,
-
,Dem.

ble,. 9,
709. 5. a,

, , , , ,, ,
Dem.
ov, not to be
50. 18. a,
ov,
Arist. Ethic. *. 5.
ha,
rectified, incorrigi-

indefinite, indistinct, confused,


augment, enrich, ripen,

02,
grow strong and

weak, infirm
I am made


ov,
strong
rich, Herod.
4. 3. 8.
I

having no power, unable,


weak words, ineffectual, un-
ripen, swell,
1. 193.

, .
or

,
unbroken to the yoke,

,
, ov, unsubdued,
virgin unsubmitted to the yoke of mar-
riage, unmarried, Od. . 109.

, , -
a

ov, unexpected, unlikely, impro-

-
,

availing, A. 7. 7. 14.
in

8. 3.
war —
incapacity,
things impracticable
—weak
sc. ssv, it is
weakness, inefficiency,
Dem. 238. 12.
— weak
disabled
impossible

in mind, timid
Rom.

,, ,
bable, Ion. 1448. fr. , in resources, poor, destitute
and

,,, ,
, ,
ov,

-
unexpectedl}'.
unapproved, despised, A. 3. 4.
a counterfeit money.
In a moral view a man is aho

In regard to an end, a person is


when
he falls short of his duties as a Christian.
-,
adv. without power or ability,

V. Horn. 34.
he is unable, too weak, infirm,

f. I am unable, am
infirm, 'have nopower,E.4. 4.9.
Mat. 1 7.20, nothing will be impossible.
— — —

,
,
27
, ,
the want of inability, power,
the want of power over many,
, Ion. , «?, in song, imp.
to sing,
, II.
,
. 598. aor. 1.
do thou sing of, Od. S. 492.
A

dif-
~,
I

for ntilov, sang or used


meet, imper. -
28-.

,
he who wants the power to command
many things. Dem. —
not to be entered
Androm. 1035.
ov, sacred,
, , a place not ,. 339. 20. impossibility.
into,
fers somewhat from

still more widely from

to sing with an instrument, fr.


as this last
means to praise or delight with song and
which means
which
-,
^, ,),^. -
;

,, ,
,
to be entered into, and thus profaned, is the parent also of

,,
sanctuary, adytum, fr.
»^, f. aor. 1. ,, I satiate, glut, fut. Zsto, for
I am sung or celebrated, imp.
was celebrated, Olym. 10.
inf.

Ion.
,
, ^,, ,,
the accus. - about to feed,

,, , ,,,
and
should satiate the horses
tigue them with running, a. 28 1 inf.
the genit. fut. sub.
II. . 817. governs

.

^,
fa-

.
84.— resounded,

myself in singing of a person.

I.
I sing,
145. f. m.
f.
10. 92.
flex sense, will sing of myself, will delight

Dor. ,
Dor.
f.

,,,
will sing,
in a re-

Theo.
2.
70, to satiate itself with, said of an impe- thou shalt Theo.
tuous spear, fut. m.
shall satiate yourselves with tears
ye
— shall
pers. for
,, he will sing, 7. 72. aor. 1
ahv, for ahiv, to sing, 1 4. 30.
inf.
sang,
sing,
. , 7. 78.

AEIKH2, ,,
^, ,
have enough of weeping.
6, a lord, Heb. ptt, the favourite just — foul,
unsuitable, unworthy, un-
disgraceful — disproportionably
,
, ,
of Venus, and father of Priapus. After his
death he was changed into a flower of the
same name. - the gardens of ,
great, immense,
unjust deed,

,
nace, Od. . 216.
II.

,
,
a. 341.
an insulting me-
for
an


. , ,
, ,
, ^, , , , ,
Adonis, i. e. unfruitful gardens.
ov, ungratified, Hecub. 42.

presented with a gift, Theo. 1 6. 7. ,


,
not

, , without a gift, uncorrupted


— Elect. 205.

, an unjust
unmerited, or infamous deaths, S.
,
Ion. ,,
treatment, insult, contumely,
also

,
having bestowed no gift, Herod. 1. 73. 11. .
?, Att.
19.

,
giftless gift, most free from f. of the same sense

.
, -/,
bribes, Thuc. 2. 65. unprofitable, Ajax, 665. with I treat ignominiously, infa-

^^,
et priv.
, ,
ward, disinterested, iEschin. c. Ctes. $ .
^, not expecting a re-
mously abuse,
fect — disfigure,
or
II.

.
. 545. render foul, in-
256.
, ov, mean, unseemly,

.
adv. without bribes, from
, ill-looking, 242. shabby-
II. f. 84. Od. .

,
disinterested motives, Dem. 310. 22. ignominious, loathsome disease, Bacchyl.
— (,..
0, —
contr. &, combat, conflict,
1 6. —
unlucky buds
basely, Od. 0. 231.
,
meanly,

game

, &,
versity,
or danger encountered in ad-
toil
Theo. 21. 52. Anacr. 1.
a-frhiov, and contr. a ,,
sj, the dwelling ever on the
same subject, verboseness security given
for a man's appearance to render an ac-

, , , , , (\, .-,
prize or reward of victory obtained by a
successful combatant,

.
f. imp.
II.

f.
. 699.
count of all his past conduct, whenever
called for, Dem. 341. 15.
ov, ever to be remembered, ever

, ,,
Herod.
,
without the augment, Herod. 1. 67. I fight,
combat, II. . 389. wrestle, struggle with.

, \;, , ,,,,
, ,,,-
they fought unsuccessfully,
1. 67.

, and
memorable.
Iphig. A. 1530.

f.
,
ever flowing, Herod. 1. 93.

without the aug.


ov,

or aor. .
pass, or
or
glory,

,, a
&, ,
22. 24.
, , , ,
wrestler, combatant, pugilist, Theo.
Nem.

.
-
public games, vixn, Nem. 9. 5.
,&, ,
10. 95.
, a victory gained in the
(Iyiv, p. pass.

the same analogy as

pluper.
(Apoll. 2. 171, or by

and the like,


or
becomes
hence the
II. y. 272, had hung,

, ,
prize. ,
6, ij, a person who gains the

,
22. II. .

been suspended, hence
form of this is also both from
Another


,, and adv. always, ever
cent,
ally, without interruption,
continu-
8. 2. 1. some- .
the air) I lift in the air, raise remove in
consequence of raising, convey, carry, bring,

,
,
,
times used with a noun,
sc. unto time which
times, or time without end.
,
eternal, immortal,
*, f.
, II.

I sing,
,
y. 296.
6,
is

,
ever, to all

celebrate or relate
ever born,
II. . 264.

,
hoist, exult,
I

raise against, oppose, 6. 424.
bring, make, war upon, Herod. 7. 132.
am

raised himself, soared,


raised —
Trach. 216. aor.
I raise myself, I rear,

Od.
raising themselves, being risen,
1.

.
pass, ,
540. part.
— : —
29

,
being made ready to depart by weighing ,
,

cause to grow, cherish,
I
A
. 139. .
30

anchor, Herod. 1. 170.

, ,,
Herod.
or
the virtues rear themselves
as plants in the fresh dews, Nem. 8. 70.

, 2. 79.
,
from .
a song, ballad,, ,
, augment, excite, 226.

02,Nem., ,
limbs,
I grow, improve, Od.
f. 66. imp.
reared, . 93. I prosper, o. 371.

.
ov, increasing, invigorating the
4. 119.

., ,
, ,,
an epithet of an ant, (as
6, yj, q, not working, idle, inac-

^tores. ,)
always employed in drawing together its
industrious, laborious , , ,^
tive, slothful,
ov
II. /. 320. ,
Ion. ,

,
,
,
, ,
but perhaps the true reading is

,, , ,,
easily moved by the wind, i. e. little,

Dem.
yi,
Prom. 452.
,
,
,
528.
a perpetual banishment.

supposed to be for
7.

immense, unworthy ; but it is rather from


fr.
also

/, imp.
,, .
unprofitableness,
— unskilfulness.
also
rise in the
wave, see
sloth, idleness, inactivity,

448, floated.
, ^,
air,
II.

6, the air

mosphere, blackness, obscurity, a thick


1. 2.

.
at-
56. ..
*

250.

,,
a priv. and kxrfroc, not tranquil, stormy, cloud. In this sense is feminine, and ie

tumultuous. It well expresses a tempest opp. to the pure air.

, ,
,,, . ,
alone
,
by sea, or the tumult of a carnage or rout,
and this suits the context in II. . 77, where
it occurs.

a, ov, belonging to the air, high, airy
having the colour of the air, dark, pitchy,

Phcen. 1530. aerial, winged.

,
,458.

•/\,
,
against- my will, II.

Od. v.
from

against her will, r. 133.


o<j,

277.

adv. in spite of, II. 666.


I
,. ,,.
unwilling, involuntary,
a. 301. 327.
,
am unwilling,

.
II.

forced
. f.
,
6, one who walks through the
air, traversing, sweeping the sky, an epithet
of the wind, Plut. 9. 752.

the sky,Nubes, 225. «ug,


,
I walk in the air, traverse

philosophers, Anthol. 3. 266.


,
said of vain

swimming in the air, Nubes,


*,

,
,
,
ov, involuntary, unwelcome, un-
pleasant, Trach. 1265.
Doric form of
,
the sun. ,
,.
,
], a whirlwind, fr. a augm. and
to whirl, a tempest, storm, hurricane.
336.
f. ,
I measure the air, or, as
we should say, build castles in the air, I trifle,

, ,
O. 11. 3. fr.
,
, , airy-footed or light-

. 40.
~\,
, -,
like a whirlwind, i. e. with the
rapidity or impetuosity of a whirlwind, II.
Od. . 292, thoughtless, opp. to
,
footed, swift, II. y. 327.
6, q, airy-minded, giddy,
said of one

, , ,
the impetuosity of winds whirling from all whose mind is carried away by every breath

,
quarters,

&', , ,
der the whirling orbs of shining stars.

or
or
un-

whirling like a
storm, rapid, impetuous, II. y. 13.
and
,
-, , and
,
of desire without any ballast or solidity
from reason and truth, from
mind, II. . 183.

or
„,
to breathe,

levity, folly,
, , (Heb. ']}) an
Od. . 469.
eagle,
,,
, 6, ij, turning the feet with the ra-

C. 1081. II. 6. 409. .


pidity of a tempest, swift, impetuous, (Ed.

I have no hope, I despair, de-


, \.
aquila

,
,
, ,
(or ,
—a
an eagle, Mat. 24. 28.
)
f.
standard bearing the figure of

aor. 1.
repose, rest, Od. y. 1 51.

,, ,
I breathe,,
aor. 2. ayjv,

,
spond, II. yi. 310. fr. part, breathing, Od. . 478.
^-, , having no hope, hopeless un- — ,,], .. soot,

184. filth, mouldiness.

,
expected, unlooked for, Od. . 408. a, ov, dry, parched.

~, ov, unhoped for, Ajax, 648. a dried skin, hide, . 238.

,
II.

,, , ,
,,,, ,
,,, ,
I have no hope, do not expect.

and
, {], despair, Pyth. 12. 55.

,
for
adv. contrary to ex-
pectation, unexpectedly, Luc. 3. 451.
from
fastener, string of a bow, Call. 2. 33.
ov,
a

and
,, , ,,
— withered, exhausted with
,
2.

or
-,
302.

lie
I
f.

dry, parch,
drying, Horn. Ven. 271.
ov, not feeling envy or jealousy, un-

envious not an object of envy, unenvia-
aor.
grief,

1.
Anthol.

they dry,
Ion.

or ever flowing, ble,wretched, Iphig. T. 619. not to be —


perennial,inexhaustible inextinguishable, — coveted, despicable, Plut. 1. 180. , [,

, ,,
Pyth. 1.9. immortal, Olym. 14. 17. never
fading glory.
f. also f. ,
,, ,
Herod.

damaged
7. 140.

or
6, q, unfined, unpunished

injured unavenged,
—not
Med.
— — — — —

,,
31
1050.
A H2
adv. without damage or , ,.
. , breath -drawing, panting, keenly
ov,

,
32

-,
,

,,, .
loss, with impunity, fr. blowing, Apoll. 2. 1103.
ov, not sought into, unexamined, or , unsubdued, in-
.
,

,,
,,

,
iEschin. c. Ctes. § 3.
crying loudly, incessant,
II. . 747, continued uproar.
vincible,
,
mortal, Ay. 6. 1. fr.
,
6. 4. 24.

6, ,
,
§.
not subject to death, im-
, oi -
, , , ,, , &,&,
unremitting sorrow, II. . 25. the immortal gods.
— adv. incessantly, Heb. and Arab. \,
render immortal, im-
f. I
pVif» with a prefixed. mortalize, oi those who

, ,, ,
, *, and , teach the immortality of the soul, Herod.
unyoked, unmarried, ec, Med. 536. 4. 5. becomes immortal, Po-

perat. ,
Iphig. A. 305.
(from «£o?, a servant) I respect a

, , , ,,,
person as my master, I fear, reverence, im-
for

do not fear
Mars, II. s. 830. feel religious awe, . 267.
lyb. 6. 54.

mortality,
, Tim.
,
1
, exemption from
,
unburied, II.
6,
6. 16.
386. .
death, im-

,
iEol. a sort of pottage

,
,
imp. oy^

, ,
for jj£sto, did not fear or
respect, II. . 434. part,
from respect, respecting, a. 21.

- -
acting

ov, unfermented, unleavened, tx


made of meal, eggs, and cheese boiled to-
gether,
or
Plutus, 694.
6, q, not to

be inspected— incapable of being seen,


,
,
2, , ^,
,,.
with , ,
,
,,
.
,
tedious, opp. to, ,
unleavened cakes or bread, the

§.
-
feast of unleavened bread, 1 Cor. 5.11.
disagreeable, troublesome,
or
3. 11. 13. xn-
and is syn.
Luc. 1. 322.
2. 1. 31, not having seen the
most delightful of all sights,


or
,
contrary to law, na-

,

, . $.
^^, more
unpleasant, Herod. 7. 101.

ture, or justice —
unlawful, unjust unna- —
fr. a priv. -/$, adv. unpleasantly, tural, II. /. 63. Od. . 189. Acts 10. 28. ufo-
disagreeably, reluctantly, to be ,, fr. ,
02,
, &, , ^,
disagreeable to, or at variance with, Dem.
—hence
,
ungodly, denying a God,
6,

,
500. 15. f. xn- without God, an atheist, Ephes. 2. 1 2.
weary, am unpleasant.

,
acting contrary to the laws of God, impi-

,
I feel
anolx,
trouble
,— q, unpleasantness, irksomeness,
displeasure, a grudge,
ous, impure, Pyth. 4. 288.— hated or for-
saken by the gods, (Ed. T. 662.

,, ,
Ar^av, ,
,
in discord, at

, ,
nightingale,
or
variance— bitterness,
lence, see Theophr. Char. 20.

, ,,
Theo.


136.
a singing bird, a
1.

a, ov, of a nightingale,
viru- adv. impiously,

interposition,
,,
Od.

— neglected, .
impiously
abused, cruelly treated, Soph. Elect. 1 181.
adv. without God, without a divine
.
^,
352.
not to be healed, in-

,
plaintive,Ranss,695. frequented by night- corrigible 2. 4. 3.
, an
2,
ingales, Ion. 1482.
,, not accustomed to, unac-
incurable disease, Polyb.

^,
3. 60. 3. neglect of one's person, Theo.

quainted with strange, Trach. 870. un- Char. 19.
— ,
,,,,
to

,
, ,
usual, outrageous, A9. 3. 5.


not impressed
with or productive of moral virtue, opp.
adv. unusually.
I am unaccustomed to, imp.
, for
strument which bruises or destroys the
ears of corn, a fan.
the beard of corn.
an in-

Od. . 127. fr.

,, ,
with the genitive, they were un- f. I reject as worthless, under-

, , ,
used to dead bodies, II. x. 493. value, Od.
,
0.

,
212.
one who

, I breathe, imp. un», dual,


the south wind
,,
6, sets aside all laws,

,
they blew, II. /. 5. xn lawless, nefarious, 2 Pet. 2. 7. unlawful,
.
blew, Od. 325. inf. Att.
to breathe, Od. x. 25. II. -. 214. part,
breathing, blowing -,am carried
, ,,. illicit, Plut. 6. 382.
unlawfully, impiously, contrary
to the established laws, Prom. 150.
aboutbythewind.ci>5roi;,isdifFused,Isthm.4. said or appointed by God,

,,
ov,

§, %.
15.imp.5i>jro,panted, was agitated, II. 386. . immense,
— innumerable,
vast, II. . 4.— much, Od. . 61.

,
to, breath, Ajax, 674.
breath of the gods, said of the rose, as that
on which the gods have breathed beauty ,,
,.,
ov, set aside, ,. 216.

fr.
fr.

, §.
a augm. and

,,,,
and favour— darling of the gods, Anacr. 53.

,,
not to be disapproved.

,
,
scil. it is

, 6, blowing, blast, Od. . 567. I set aside, supersede, abolish,


.
ov, stormy, boisterous, II.
ov, violent, II. . 876.
395.
^. expose as futile,
.
1 Cor. l. 19.
q,
— — —— — — —
33 Si 34

,the setting aside, annulling, abrogating,


abolition,

,,,
Heb.
and *, —
7. 18. perfidy.
, ,, , -
thickly — abundantly-;—
to drink at
,— crowd—
at once, collectively,
one draught.

, , '. -
>^, '4, also f. I collect, gather together,
orKunuatYi, Minerva, the goddess of wisdom. Dem.33. 18. accumulate

, ,
Athens so called as under
the guardianship of Minerva

, ^,
adv. for to Athens -^,
,, ,,
I am
myself, Ileracl. 122.
.
collected

5. 4. 44, they held silence, being


— collect, assemble,

,
,
from Athens at Athens. closely embodied, opp. to

/, , /.
ihog, y, one of the four tribes into , ro,
which the Athenians were divided. , , the action of a collection,
collecting,
a, ov, an inhabitant of Athens, an
02,
a crowd, Hecub. 314.
, , unwilling, reluctant,
,
Athenian, the Athenians.

,
6,

ov, not hunted, abounding with opp. to — not having confidence


,,
,
,
,)
,
game,

Hipp. 652.

,,
toil,

, -
,
,
,, , ,
.
1.4. 16. fr.
untouched, unsullied, entire,

,
ov,
things not to be
touched or meddled with, i. e. profane,
impious things, fr. a, Siya.

, , ,
6, a combat, conflict, contest,

or

f. ,, or
Od. . 160.
,
to, for
the reward of victory, prize.
f. (for
,

or

I engage in the public games, con-


or courage, timid, despondent, sad, dis-
heartened, opp. to

out confidence or alacrity,


Od. . 463.
to be despaired of, hopeless,
Ay.
desperate—
1. 35,

to be grievously affected, a priv.


f. ,,
I despond, lose my confidence


or courage I fear, become unwilling, A.
7. 1.6. Do not provoke your children, ha
lest they become unwilling,
-
were become more
adv. unwillingly, with-

$.

tend, combat, 2 Tim. 5.— encounter Gol. 3. 2-4. i, e. unwilling to obey, reluct-

,
2.
trials, suffer ills,

, ,
II. o.

having engaged in an inglorious con-


30.

,fects of provocation.
,, ,
ance and obstinacy being the natural ef-

,
,
Eur. Supp. 317.
flict, Ion. reluctance, de-

,
, ,
ro, labour, the produce of
labour, Theo. 21. 9.
, —
conflict, combat.
, combat, conflict, labour,
spair, dejection, fear

02, . 1. 6. 12.
— sorrow,
Herod. 1. 37.
oi/,(pen. short) without a door,un-
opp. to

,
struggle,

, ,^,
,
Heb.

champion, wrestler.
10. 32.

fit to combat, athletic.

a, ov, comp. having to com-



ijoog, 6, a combatant,

, .
,
guarded or unfurnished with a door,
,
, ', having a tongue with-
out a door, loose or foul in speech, petu-
lant, Orest. 901.
,
having a mouth without a
-.
, §.

,,,
bat labour and pain

,,, —
miserable, wretched.

we
grief,
adv. miserably,
are very wretched.
sorrow, misery.
door, garrulous, Philoct. 188.

,, I sport, play as children do out of

doors or out of school, II. o. 364.


,
sport, delight of parents,

,
vj,

, ,
(, ,
ard of the games,

victor.
,
£,
,

II. y. 124.
Ss<a.
ad-
judges the prize, umpire, president or stew-

6, jj, one who wins the prize,


nQoc, , one who

,
said of a child, Anthol. S. 305.
Arist. Rhet.
,,
negative, Orest.
3. 3. 4.
frivolity,

having no thyrsus, a being


vj,

1 502.— enfuriated with the

thyrsus, a being augmentative, outrageously


,,
tumult,

Ay. 6. 7.
ov, and
undisturbed, calm, tranquil
the utmost tranquillity,
&',
adv. without noise or
ov, free from mad, Orest. 1492.
,
, y, not having sacrificed—-not
sacrificed, Hippol. 147.— unfavourable, see
note on ^Eschin.
5.
c. Ctes. § . abominable.

,
tumult, Orest. 629.
AUPOivroc, ov, unshattered, Hec. 17. clear
voice, Pint. 8. 3 S3, , . ,, -,
a priv.
free from punishment, unpunished.
Dem. 31. 16, innocent, Mat. 27.

.
fr.

4.— unhurtful, Dem. 1437. 9. uninjured,


f. see in a clear air, fr. utu/ip,
rioto,

discern, descry, Od.


— observe — examine,
I

.
231. view distinctly
^,,
, - , unaffected by, with the genitive, 316. 17.
Adas, , and , a mountain of,

,it is

002,
neccssaryto see, must observe, Hipp. 3 7 9.
oct, ov, contr.

body, altogether, Od.


many, Pyth. 2. 65. et&^ooi
394.
comp.
collected into one, crowded in a
frequent,
thickly
.
-, —

Greece, so very high that its shade, though
distant three hundred stadia, reached the

,
island of Lemnos; hence the proverb ex-
pressing the power of the great.
fioo;. This meant,
-
woven crowns — uninterrupted, Pyth. 4. it is probable, the statue of an ox on the
231. -uupou;, utooov, ,
adv. in a body- shore. %»

D
— —

-,.,
35

unarmed,
,
A
£, without a breast-plate,
4. 2. 15. a, ^«ef. ,
,
, , , an island
, oi,
in the iEgean sea.
the inhabitants of Mgma.
30

«7, interj. alas,


tive,

,
Theo.
A/, the Doric form of
woe
4. 40.
if, or
to. It

,
utinam,
I wish, ai *Yi;,Theo. 2. 55, if thou wishest.
governs the geni-

, , ,.
25.

,,
fr. ,,
a, ov, belonging to, or of iEgina.

,a
6, q, goat-footed,

plant having sharp points


Herod. 4.

,
wish thou hadst possessed. Theo.

.
I like a thorn, 4. 25.

,
e A?os, et^, ^, a land inhabited, country, region, ,
a rushing tempest, a black

,
see
hence /,
II.

,
. 162.
,
Heb.
a city of Colchis, and
J7, ov, belonging to iEa,
*

an epithet
kv?, an island, thunder storm, from This is figura-
tively called the shield or aegis of Jupiter.
the fleecy shield of Ju-

,
of Circe, vEneid. 9. the .'Eaean island, i. e. piter, otherwise said to be a shield made

,,
At
, , f.

,,
,
the island of Circe, Od. . 70.
fr. at, I cry alas, wail over.

Orest. 1347, to lament


of the skin of the goat which nursed Jupi-
ter, Anthol. 1. 416.
,
an epithet of Jupiter, aegis-

, ,
one's fate, see Ajax, 430.

, ,
57, oi/,
,
wailing, Phoen. 337.
to be lamented, lamentable,
bearing, or, more properly, tempest-bear-
ing, fr.

,
II.

brightness, splendour
a. 202.
— glory,

,
nc,

,,
— ,
sad, Septem, 840.
a king of iEgina, and son of Jupiter
celebrity, Olym. 13. 49.
, splendid, shining,
,, ,, ,
, ,
of iEacus
, .
, ,
belonging to, or of iEacus
,oi, the race or descendants

sports at iEgina

,
sparkling, starry,

said of Pan.
,
II. a. 532.
having the horns of a goat,

in honour of iEacus.

,,,

,
painful

for

, , ,
,,

, , ', ,
also n, ov, lamentable
dusky, Ajax, 672. irksome,
Pvth. J. 161. from the interj. at eternal,
Eum.
569.
seemingly by transp. from


,
kind,

Egyptian.

666.
II. y.
, , a large vulture of the eagle
59. see Damm. 1269.

6
, Egypt. sj, ,,,
the Egyptians.
imitate the Egyptians, Plut. 8.

,
,,
sc. for ever, Eum. 669. cfi /, or 6,
ov, an epithet of a stormy sea the grave, hades— Pluto, the infernal re-
/Egean, from
Hence also
a storm or tempest.
',—
gions destruction, Theo. 4. 27.

, .
, a great sea causing to disappear, destruc-
ov,

,
monster, also one of the Titans, iEgason. tive, vast, immense, said of fire that is sub-
see II. a. 404. where Homer, by the use of terraneous or in hades, i. e. all-devouring
puns upon and irresistible, II. 455. Od. 29. .in- . —
,
, a light long spear, used visible Pluto, all-devouring, so as to cause

, ,
chiefly by huntsmen; it was called also

a slender javelin, II. 589. .
men to become invisible, Ajax, 607. ob-

,
scure, minute points, Anthol. 2. 402. un-

,
n, ov, made of goat skin,

,
or
.
of a goat, Od. . 230. fr.
certain fortune- adv. so as to
.
&,.
disappear, or vanish entirely, II. 220. fr.

, 3 a goat skin, Herod. 4. 189.

,, the poplar or alder tree.


ov,
,
,
ov,

,
ever existing, eternal, Rom. 1. 30.

,,
6, father of Theseus, and a prince a law which ever remains in
. ,
, .,
who ruled at Athens ; also one of those force, 7. 5. 26. fr. adv. eter-
who sprung from the teeth of the serpent, nally.
sown by Cadmus : hence the Thebaus were , eternity, perpetuity.
'^, , ,
,
_
called 6 ), unskilful in,
. unacquainted

,
,,
dashes, from
, a rock against which the sea
6,

a storm, and
shore, harbour, Acts 27. 39.

herd, fr. «/£,


,
, a feeder of goats, a goat-
Theo. Ep. 5. 6.
fit for feeding goats, fed upon by
a , ^
with,

'., ,
ticity,
II.

or

Herod.
y. 219.
a'ioQla,
(in later authors), Ion.
,
,
unskilfulness, ignorance, awkwardness, rus-
6. 69.
one who is ignorant of
,
,
q (in Homer), and
,

1, —,,,
sj,

-, ,
goats, Od. v. 246.
adj. tempest-shedding, an epi-
thet of a rock, whence distils a torrent or
the principles ofjustice —uncivilized, fierce,
Nem. 1.
and
96. fr. §<««*
,, voc.

,.
contr.

,, , ,
a tempest, i. e. lofty, II. ;. 15. from
and Supp. 807. see Damm. 1418.
ailot,
— modesty,
shame reverence, respect,
. II. o.

22.— fear,
661.

,
diffidence, 2. 1.
who derives it from and , as if a
rock which even the goats leave unclimbed.
", Orest. 101.

imp. or $opyv
, a species of shrub, Theo. 5. 128. f, or ailwopxi, I respect, reve-
—— — —— —— — I —— ———
37
rence— comply with consequence of re-

in real — lofty, towering
A

, I

— celestial, Eur. Supp.


38

verencing, II. a. 23.

694.
fear, obey a superior
in consequence of fearing him, a. S31.
am modest, .
8. 1. 10. I pardon, Dem.
to
to drive away the modesty of the eyes, to

,,
,
, ,,

987.

Androm. 831.
,Ion.
attendant of Helen.
], ,
Med. 441, mo-
desty has fled aloft— is gone to the sky,

, a clear sky an —

,,
,
banish shame, Plut. 8. 596. aihUo, do thou
reverence, II. .
503. for aihio, or aihov.
vj, respect, compassion.
,
ev, serene, calmly bright.

and ,
bright firmament, Plutus, 1129..
, serenity, a calm

,
ov, worthy to be feared or revered,

, ov, 6, a bright frosty air, hoar frost,


venerable

&, -,
denda

,
Olym.
or

3. 76.
aihota, the privy-parts, pu-
— chaste, modest, Olym.
most venerable or valuable,
adv. with modesty,
respectfully, Od. r. 243.
6. 129. ai-
more venerable

, ., .
Od. |.318.

real,

,.
a, ov, bright, serene— frosty, ethe-
Heracl. 857. remaining under the air,
exposed to the air.
ov, and
born in the air— producing a cold, frosty
, 6, ,
uihnpav, /?, 6, , susceptible of shame-

,.,
one who respects others, Arist. Ethic.
respectful,
respectful,
spectfully,
to
.
modest
2. 11. , ,,
-,
7.

with reverence or respect, opp.


.
more
adv. re-
air, an epithet of the north wind,

,
f.

air, Theo. 8. 78.

n, ov,
,
I lie or sleep in the open

and ,,
ing, sooty, black, Pyth. 8. 65.
£, , fire, Apoll. 3. 1303.
heat,
burning, blaz-

,
respectful, Alcest. 662.
ij,

.
having a modest mind,

Ant, aitv, as:, adv. always, ever, continually:


,,a porch or entrance into a
mansion, covered above, open on three
sides, and supported by pillars. The ap-
the notion of time continued is derived pendages of a great house are thus enu-
,
,
,) ,,
,
from continued existence : ecu therefore is
taken from ',
to exist.
merated by Damn), p. 1069.
inclosure of the court yard
the
the
,
,
II.

Ai /,
ov, 6,
or
ardent
Att.
ov,
ov, o,

— a person strong, a young man,


y. 26. v. 167.
ov, o, a king of Colchis, brother of
,
an eagle.
adj. ever fervid (as/,
court or yard so inclosed
porch leading to the hall

,,
hall; and, lastly,
prehending the ,,
jj

the house, com-


&c.
q, a sea gull or cormorant, so
^,
the
the

, ,
Circe
sc. Medea.
ov, and
y, daughter of iEeta,

of wind, windy ,,
called from its dusky hue.
is

dark livid,
So in Latin it
called fulica, from fuligo.
adj. face-burnt, —

,,
full
— —
, ,
puffing Vulcan,
cade, for &,
II. o.

I wish, utinam.
410. Bacch.594. dusky smoke burnish edbrass

,
ruddy or purple wine. oxf/.
,
,, ,
imp. y\6ov, I cause to burn, kindle, Atfavty, 6, , an Ethiopian, i. e. a man

,
Theo. 2. 184.

uiuahYi, ,
I burn, blaze, part.
ai^u,svov,b\azmgfre,ll^. 1 82.
, and ov, 6, soot, or
black cinders, as the effect of burning, at-
and
ans or Indians
^,
with a black face, a slave.
/, the Ethiopi-
a, ov, and Ai-
y, ov, of the Ethiopians.
,

, Qoihov KYiKih

,,,
art reduced to ashes.
Hecub. 911, thou

, ,,
ovjo;, adj. living in, or fond of, the

heat of the sun, Theo. 7. 1 38.


,
reduced to ashes, sooty
vj, Ethiopia, scil. yvj.

art coloured with the stain of cinders, thou Aiksv, for et xsv, if indeed, at

,,
,
but if by chance, II. . 1 70.
for ei 3*

), (the penult, long) force, elastic


spring, II. o. 709. fr.
AIKH2, for ,,
unmerited, foul,
.
,
,
,

,
burnt, II. /3. 415. II. a. 23, great, unworthy adv. unworthily,
miserably, II. %. 336.

,, ,
sooty dust, i.ashes or cinders. xeqavviov
e.
the livid fire of thunder, the for f. I treat with in-
livid lightning, Phcen. 191. dignity, Prom. 168. abuse, outrage, muti-
I colour with smoke, reduce late, having

,
f.

to ashes, E. Elect. 1140. inflicted on us the foulest indignities, A. 3.

^, 6, the shining air, i. e. the highest 4. 3. see here the force of the mid. voice for
or purest air, tzther, and thus it differs from himself, e. to gratify himself, and not from
i.

the common air, at^, which is dark, II. 0.


554. in the feminine means a se-
rene sky, serenity, evhix,
Eur. Supp. 786.
ov, or a, , ov,
a flame, —
of the aether, ethe-
O. 1. 23. —
ij, for ,
the principle of justice or reason

,, abuse,
debase,
desolate, ravage, Dem. 1075.

was an action brought for an assault, or by


a slave against his master for cruelty.

/,

D2

39
, usage,
A I

,, /, , A I

warming
40

,
uixlov, ov, ill treatment. cruel a, ov, and /}, ov,

, , and
c&Mtaftog, ov,
treatment — mutilation, Phcen.

^,
:, ,
abused, maimed, Antig. 206.
ov,

,
1526'.
ill

delusive.

,
.' ,
the blood and causing it to

the spear of a deceitful thief,


— .
thrill,
for --
soothing,

,
ov, o, a hymn in which the loss of
Linus was lamented, as if at

alas for
,,
Rhesus. 709. peaceable, gentle, opp. ta
Prom. 206. fr.

,
Linus a dirge, elegy, Again. 159. given to shed blood, fierce,
, jj,

ov, adj. plaintive, aihivu, adv. mourn- —


Hec. 91. skilful in shedding blood incon-
fully, Call. 2. 20. sequence of being accustomed to hunt, ex-

,
,
a cat, pert, 49.
IMA,
ov, o, s?,

blood 2<? effusion of blood,


felis.

-/, II. e.

one who uses his courage to

, .,
ro, ov, 6,

slaughter, murder, death, Heb. 9. 14. Acts
20. 28. nun the price of blood,
blood-money, Mat. 27. 6. or the fine im-
posed on a man for killing another man, —
,
the
I!. 57.
destruction of others
31.
,, k, and
high-minded,

honour, estimation— a story, fable


ov, 6, encomium,

,
praise,
blood being the principle of life, Call, in Del.
288. but man subject to that corruption which ,— a proverb, Theo. 14. 43.
f. or aor. 1 ,
I praise, .

, , ,, ,
the soul is supposed to have derived from the extol— assent, approve— promise, Philoct.
contagion of the body, Mat. 3 6. 1 7. Gal. 1 16,
— seed, offspring, race, as possessing the same
blood, Acts 1 7. 26. Nem. 3. 1 14. II. £,21
.

1,— ,
1398.

, ,
,
or
— am content.
,
and
and , praise.
n, ov,

, ,
, /, ,
wine as having the colour of blood, Dent. 32. 1 4. praiseworthy, laudable.
,,, vj, blood inflamed and stream-
ing from a wound, Philoct. 696.
,
201, f. I praise,
or
admire,


II. v.

f.
374.

,, ,
intimate, hint insinuate

,,
tj, a strong fence, hedge, fr. the per. I
Heb. i/DiV, Theo. l. 47. — teach by obscure or language, figurative
, y, the satisfying of the dead Ion. 430. Ajax, see Rhet. 1 1 58. Arist. 8. 2. 1 2.

by shedding blood, a sacrifice offered on , and a dark ov, 6,

the tomb of the dead, funeral rites, Olym. saying— enigma— paradox,Eur.Supp.l064*

,-,
1. 146. x.ov(iiO).

a:, r,,

,
the shedding of blood,
— a discourse containing hidden meaning,
such as a fable, allegory, parable, aiviy-
a

), ,
Heb. 9. 22. fr. ,-..
1 stain, soak, cover with

-;,
through a dark medium, i. e. by ana-

,
logy, indistinctly, 1 Cor. 13. 12.

,, - ,
f.

blood, Theo. Epig. 1. render bloody by , , enigmatical, dark,


cutting or wounding, Hecub. 1171.
,:, ov, blood-stained, Phceniss. 1507.
a, ov, and
,,
/, , ^ a, ,
mysterious, Arist. 2. 21. 8.
y, ov, obscure, (Ed. T. 439.
adj. dark,

,,
blood-stained, bloody, mixed with blood, the dark things or the perplexities of

, Alcest. 854. Phcen. 1424. fate— enigmatically, obscurely,

,
a sanguinary battle. Prom. 948.

,,
,/:,
thirsty lion,
ov, o, r), blood-shedding or
blood-fetching death, Septem, 419.

Eum.
,
6, j;, lapping blood, blood-

93. .
. AIN02,
tolerable,

,
II.
-/?,

. 25.— furious
anger, terrible
ov,
Od.
grievous,
. 447.
battle,
mournful, sad.
II. «.
more
most
40.— fierce
in-
cruel,

,
1 evil,

,,
;
, ,-
,
,
ov, streaming with blood,
bloody drops, Jphig. A. 1515.
ov, 6, y, having bloody looks.
bruises of
the eyes, which covered the face with

-,
and
very, exceedingly,
aivofcv, adv. also aivu, grievously,

grievously, very grievously,


ov, 6, terrible in
ov, , ,
.
II. «• 9-5.

might, brave,
having terrible jaws,
grievously

.
,
blood, Phcen. 877. ir fierce-mouthed, Call. 4. 92.

,, 17.\,

, ,
glaring looks,
Here. Fur. shooting from

ov, 6,
..
his eyes blood-streaked nerves, i. e. casting

devouring blood, sangui-


or sluggish, Theo. 1 5. 27.

Theo. 25. 168.


ov, , , wretchedly

, a lion fierce and terrible,


-.
§. effeminate

,narj%

,, . ,
fr.

,,
aipoQcayr,;,

. ,
Philoct. 825. fr.

,
,
Theo. 24.
blood-burst, said of a vein
losing blood in consequence of being burst,

ov, , , blood-sprinkled, slaugh-


tered, Tphig. T. 224.
«,
blood —raw, Od. v.
mixed,
343.
18.

fr.
polluted, with
53. ..
afflicted,
ov,

Od.
, ,.,
, ij,

.
This supposes that the name Pans was in-
ill-fated,

terpreted by his friends in an honourable


manner, as indicating something good and
.
wretched, Od.

grievously suffering, sadly


200.
cruel or pernicious Paris.
/.
— — ———a

, ,,
41 rr A I 42
noble, which is intended to re-

, be overcome, 600, deep .

, ,—,,
but, alluding perhaps to the Arab.
be eminent or noble.
,,,f.

without the aug.


to

imp. nvvpyv,
1 take, catch,
,, , distress,

stant, inevitable,
a deep death, i. e.
death occasioned by a deep wound in-
deep de-
struction, i. e. destruction in the deep, Od.

seize, he stripped, II. 579. ocivv-
t&i, takes for himself, takes possession of,

,
.
,, , ,
«.,11.
cable.
a deep snare, inextri-

,
Od. f. 144.— take food, eat, Theo. 24. 137.

,. ,,
n, ov, also high
|, ,, vj, a she-goat ew|, o, a — arduous, formidable, Anthol. 1. 243.

,,
,
he-goat : the young is called
the Ionic form of imp. «i|-
-, ov, high, deep, II. 3. 369.
Od.
inacces-

.
sible, S. 516.

002,
I rush, bounce, spring, 11. . 369.

n, ov, variously coloured, varie-


02,
, ~ ,, ) ov, 6, deeply wise, cunning,
Prometheus, Prom. 18.
scil.

,,
— (,
,—
, ,
gated quick-glancing nimble. oci- ov, a goat-herd.
parti-coloured wasps,
a horse quickly bending his feet, , f.
n, ov, of a goat-herd.
feed goats, Theo. 8. 85.
I

',
fleet, scil. koltx, 11. r. 404.
artfully-coloured falsehood, Nem. 8. 43.
warbling varied notes, Theo.
, , ,,
'AIPEXi, f.
a flock of goats, 11.
ov, to,
a hammer tares, darnel.
or per. obs.
476.


.
,
— various or ambiguous sounds. —
,€6.
Ion. 498.
44.

, , iEolus, god of the wind, sup- —


posed to have been a mariner, and thus
called,as being acquainted with the changes
aor. 2. iihov, I take, seize
overtake, capture, slay
take an enemy,,
destroy, demolish
overcome, take by the force of evidence,
convince, convict, detect,
prefer, dictate,
1. 2. 49.

Herod,

l.
.
132.— take one

,
,
of the wind. But the term seems to be de- thing from another, divide- trial.

, ,
rived from
logy as

, ,
becomes
to turn, by the same ana-
ex.•..

ov, o, the son of Helen, and father


of Sisyphus. Hence ov, 6, a de-
6
thus requires.

.
f.
ccipfi,

nvo/xott,
taken, seized
Plat. Dial. 137, reason

p. ^,,
am
aor. ,.
~, , , , ,
aor. 2.
scendant of iEolus the , , take for myself, seize, capture take one —
yEolians, or the nation of iEolus. thing in preference to another, prefer, choose

, , n, ov,
belonging to the iEolians, AColic, iEoIian.
fem.adj.se. yn, land of the YEolians,
and a, ov, — choose officers.
, choice, option, preference,
by choice, voluntarily
a sect in —
,
,,,
jEolis, coast of Troas, occupied by the
iEolian Greeks after the destruction of Troy.
f. yaa, I move in various
religion or philosophy, as being that which
a man prefers to any other, Acts 5. 17.
division or schism in a church
— study,
made by a

ways,

. (?,
,,,
roll, Py.th. 4. 414. Od. v. 24. sect or party II. 5. 2. 2.

,
, wielding the rapid thun- liable to be taken, easily

', §.
y, ov,

der, an epithet of Jupiter, fr. captured, A. 1. 3. 21.


,,

, ,
having a variegated , ov, chosen, preferred— preferable.

,,
6, v\,

,
,
breast-plate or corslet.

.
ov,
artfully-coloured counsels,
cunning, Theo.
and

J 7. 19.

ov, , having a parti-coloured or


i. e.
, having
specious,

,— love
f.
more
comprehensible, Plat. Dial. 218.
, aor.
eligible,

a person in consequence of being


preferred, Mat. 12. 18.
I
. 2.

prefer,
1. 2.

choose

,
curiously wrought girdle or mitre, II. f. 707. ov, fond of making divisions, schis-
,,
said of
jj,nimbly turning his horses,
one who rides with speed, ^, a -,
matic, Tit. 3. 10.
et, ov, to be preferred it ,,
,,
,
steed, II. y. 155.
ov, , , speaking with
mouth, ambiguous, Prom. 662. ropec.
, an epithet of night as
spangled with stars, many-coloured.
a coloured ,,
is

upon
said
necessary to choose, must take.
a play upon the word
Od. . 72.
or rather
as if he had
etwg, unlovely, uncouth, wretched
This allusion appears certain from
,,
,,,), .
Irus.

solete
a term by which the Scythians

husband-killers, from

for
,
designated the Amazons, as wAqoktovoi,

,
apparently the

,,
Latin vir in Greek characters, and the ob-
I smite, Herod.
verse 55, where the poet has a similar play.

,
raise
.

up a
sub.
aor.

thing,
1. y^x, m.

lift,
I raise in
pick up, John
, aor. 2,
the air
8. 59..
— raise
2,
,
4. 110.

II.
six, v, high, lofty
. 223, high anger,
— deep,
i.
kit.
c. difficult
,-
to
a thing to carry it, carry, convey,
take away, Mat. 9. 6. 1 am raised,

raise ni} self, raise a thing for myself, ob-


— /,
— — — — —
43 A 12
, A 44

,
I

, ,2,
,—,
tain, appropriate, secure, Soph. Elect. 34. ov, unjust— inhuman, opp. to uiai-
to obtain glory, II. . 287. improper, indecorous, II. v. 202.
raise myself against another, make tuar f. mo), I govern, rule, Med. 1 9.

upon, Att.
Thuc. 1. 52. opp. to
ship, set sail,

raise the anchor of a
4. 4. 14.
,),
ov, also

a judge,
umpire,Od.S. 258. steward, Theo. 25. 48.
,,
I cast anchor —
raise in the air, so as to
suspend, torment by suspending, John 10.

,
AI2XP02, x,
base, opp. to
ov, comp.
base in form,
sup. xta-

24.

-,,
(
raise so as to give vent to, indulge, xi-
(/,to indulge fear, Ajax, 75. xi-
to indulge pride, 129.
to give air to an evil report,

— <
ugly —

,
base in mind or conduct, foul, disho-
nourable reproachful, II. y. 38. disgrace-

,
ful, infamous,

shameful deeds,
crimes a/^^i,adv.basely,ignominiously.
,

—-
propagate, 193. raise a thing away, re-

^, tog, ugliness, opp. to


move,
", , kill. disgrace, infamy, Od. . 224.

,)
, the abode of darkness, the
grave, hades, II. x. 3.
xxrrihk,
(for x'i-
.
856, the soul went , sog, , r„ covetous of dishonour-
able gam, basely bent on gain, 1 Tim. 3. 3.
see Arist. Ethic, . 1. $,
, ., ,
,
adv. meanly covetous, from a love of base
clown to the house of Pluto.
A ISA,

,
Androm. 1204.
,
v>, fate, destiny

destiny holds him."


decree— the
destined period of life, II. x. 416. Ssov
a fate of God, a divine or irresistible fate,
,
inaccessible
fate, Ajax, 256. " an inextricable lot or

,
, ov, appointed by fate, ordained,

,,
gain, 1 Pet 5. 2.

sordid avarice, Polyb. 6. 46. 3.

3. 2. 1 3.

:, .
,
the love of base gain,

I usefoul language, Arist. Rhet.

ov,
, indecency.
, , one who
or base things, author of dishonourable
, practises mean

,
,
Od. o. 239.
day of death—just,
5. 31.

,
,
ov,
benign, Theo. 17. 72.
v„
the fatal day, the
suitable, right,

,
prosperity, Eum. 999.
fortunate, auspicious, lucky-
adv. luckily,
Herod.

,deeds, Med. ^346.

AI2XTNH,
,
, foulness of language,
indecency, Dem. 14S9. 8.
yroc, y, baseness, Ephes. 5. 4.
,
(pen. long) shame arising
from modesty, diffidence— shame arising

,,
2,
seasonably, Ion. 410.

, f. I breathe, exhale. Svy.ov


breathing out his life, II. 468.

, .
from a sense of guilt, remorse a disgrace,

,
Herod. 1.
Phil. 3. 19. infamy,
towards a superior modesty, —
,

i. e.

,
10. respect
a god-

,,
hence hard breathing.
ccioQofAXt, aor. 2.
f. perceive with the senses,
I
— - dess, Septem, 411.

pass,
f. vva, aor. 1.

,,
(for ), p.
I cause a

,
namely, see, hear, feel, smell perceive
with the mind, understand, comprehend,

,,
discern —
learn, remember, aor. 2. m. w-
thought, Med. 539.
ij, perception, feeling,

E. Elect. 290. xiafaaug


sense,
such percep- §,

,
, ,
person to

,
disappoint,

,
aor.
feel
shame, debase, disfigure
feel
I feel shame,
blush, am dishonoured, f. 1. pass,
shall be disappointed, 2 Cor. 10.
1. inf.
shame, Nem, 9. 63. —
to
scorn or disgrace
- 8.
I

tions or views as the gods entertain, Plat.

,,
Dial. 295.

ofsense
',

,
/jTriffiou,

f. |<y,
ov, sensible,
ov, ,
— the intellectual
aor. 1. ,
perceptible.
seat of the senses, organs
faculties,
pass, ', Heb. 5.4.
I rush
,by rejecting, Pyth. 3. 38. part,
disfigured,

honour,

, ,
.
ov, 6,
II. . 1 80.
necessary to respect, must
it is

4. 2. 19.— ought to feel shame.

,
apt to feel shame, sus-
ceptible of shame, Arist. Ethic, . 9.

, rush from the ground, spring up, Od. x.


99. rush away, hasten, vanish, 495.
from a bow, fly, dart rush down, drop.
I
',, dropped/row
rush

urge myself, drive,



, , ,
, ,
II. . 1

95. aor.
. 404.
25. 15.
for

.
or,

5. 2. 6.
whether, Theo.
AITEH,f. wa,\). yrnxx, I ask,beg— court
demand. It governs two accusatives, Acts
I
5. 74.

am asked—

, ,
1 the hands, ask for myself, Polyb. 4. 14. 7. beg, supplicate.
,
.

AI2T02, ov, (by sync, for fr. and — ], request,


(,) no longer to be seen or heard of, suit, demand, Jud. 8. 24. Dan. 6. 7.
vanished, Od. . 235, ov, 6, one who asks, a beggar— one
they made him unknown, caused him to

disappear ignorant of, Tread. 1313.— un-
able to recognise, 1321.
eiiVoiy,f. ),
I cause to disappear, annul,

Prom. 151. extirpate, devastate, Herod.
, who is asked,

,,
Theo.

ovk
23. ult.
ov,
a person courted, a favourite,

to be asked or demanded—
,
unasked, CEd. T. 393.
, ov, to be asked it is ,
3. 69, necessary to ask— must seek or demand.
— — — — —— —

,
15

, —
,
A IX
disposed to ask, Arist. Ethic.
ov,

. 1 supplicatory verses.
.

, ,
, -, A A
a, ov, speedy, rapid wind,
.
276, he dissolved
II.
46
'

, , f.

, ,
I beg, solicit charity as a men-
dicant, Od. q. 558.
,
oj, or


ov, reason, cause,
motive the subject of a legal inquiry,
fault, crime —
accusation the terms on
,

the speedy assembly, i. e. speedily dissolved.
adv. speedily, quickly, Od.
f.
521.
imp. a'iov, another form of
I breathe— breathe out life, expire, II. o.
252.— I receive impression from the breath
.
,
which a man seeks an union with a woman,

,
or voice of another, i. e. I hear, II. o. 248.

,
, ,, - ,, , —
Mat. 19. 10. the cause for which a man

, ,
seeks a physician, i. e. disease, Luke 8. 47.
f. but more commonly
aor. 1. I accuse,
. 1 1 hence the Latin aio.
',
.

ovoc, q, Dor.
,
shore, Theo. 11. 14.
everlasting age, eternity,
for ever —
a period of time, age,

,
f.

charge, blame I am accused, life, —


Herod. 1. 32. the present world,.

,
,
E. 1. 6. 8. but

,
well as an active sense*
has a passive as

,
they were
accused, A. 3. 3. 9. see also Dem. 250. 292.

,, , , must complain of,blame, .7. 1.6.


oj, accusa-

tion, charge, Arist. Poet. 83. Prom. 194.


,

Mat. 13. 22. the Jewish dispensation,

Mat. 28. 20. a good demon, angel, as
supposed to exist for ever, Heracl. 900.
Ephes. 2. 2. the eternal ideas of
God, which he used as patterns in the
creation of all sensible things, and to which

,
a, ov, liable to be accused, blameable, all things will perfectly conform in the end.
II. y. 164.— substantively, cause,

to the author,
,, -
author.

O. 12. 19.
to return thanks
\>,
1 Cor. 10. 11, the
completions of the eternal models, i. e. the
events which fulfil or realize the patterns
, .
,
2. 4. p. 11 1, being the princi- of things in the divine mind,
§,
,
pal cause of the victory. Heb. 11. 3, " that
,
, a celebrated mountain of Sicily the eternal models of things were made by

, ,
a,
,
so called probably from
accountofitsvolcanic eruptions

-
ov, of iEtna, ^Etnean.
, oi,
to burn, on

iEtolians
— vEtolian.
a, ov,
the word of God," i. e. " by faith we com-
prehend that the universe we see, did not
proceed from sensible objects as its ulti-
mate cause, or from the combinations of

,
,and

,,
, ) ,,-,
jEtolia.
,,

^, ,)
pectedly.
a, ov,
an iEtolian
sc. ysj, country of the JEtolians,

Call. 4. 237,
adv.
sudden—
on a sudden, unex-
matter and motion, but from a spiritual
intelligent Being, who planned all things
conformably to perfect models previously
formed in his own mind."
everlasting
(from
— ancient, Rom.
I fio~t, Hec.
1 4. 25.

,,—

/ , ,
a spear, called

, , (properly the iron spike
the point of a

spear a spear the end for which the
spear is used, namely, war, battle, Herod.
7. 52.

, ,,—
arms, a spear being the chief weapon
in war, II. . 324.
a man in war.

the spirit which actuates
on 32. imp.
in the hand
II. . 253.

K. 4. 4.
2. 236.

suspend in the air wave
plup.

am raised in mind, animated,
hung,

soars with hope, Antho\.

I
-
am suspended, tossed in
same danger with the basest, Thuc. 7. 77.
the

Prom. 405, he displays an insolent spear, ,


, an academy, a celebrated

,
), ,
,
i.

-
dish
e. hostility.

,,
f.

ov, ,
I fight
— arm, Ajax, 39. bear arms,
a man
with a spear, bran-

in
II.

arms— a
.
brave
324.
school near Athens, deriving its institution
from the philosophy of Socrates, the ob-
ject of which was to withdraw the atten-
tion of the learned from remote and barren

, .,
warrior Hec. 120, the speculations, and fix it on subjects calcu-

, , /,, , ,,
armed host. lated to improve the moral and political
taken in war. condition of man. In the language of the

,
ov,
Dem.
480, war-captured persons, Stoics, ignorance is vice or disease, and to

,
prisoners of war a captive,
7}, a female captive, fr.

f. f. ,
inform is to heal. Hence eexesi»
heal the people, meant to reform them.
The penultimate by analogy is short, as in
to

,
,
1 make

, -,
2 Cor. 10. 5.
captive

women, 2 Tim. 3. 6.
—bring under subjection,
make a conquest of silly

Luke 21.24, they shall be led into bondage.


,
v\, captivity, Rev. 13. 10.

ov, 6, spear-bearer, one of the


body-guards, Herod. 1. 8. . , ,,
pounds in
those nouns are
from verbs in

, ,,
,
derived from the com-

or
all

; as
in
,
whereas
;

which come

academic.
adv. gently, softly, Pyth. 4. 278.
;
— —— — — — — —

, -,
47
, , - ,, , f. or ,, p.
A
pass. yjx«^- i. e. to feast on things without the trouble
, . 4S

, ,
I sharpen, edge, or expense of procuring them. fr.

- ,
or

02,
,<«««/,

sharpened, pointed, II. . 135. , —

,
(fisuag, of no value brief, minute.
,
, fr.

, ,
unclean, opp. to
xxuxipu, Acts 10. 14. Ephes. 5. 5.
$ xxxpsi in a short time

,
adverbially, a moment, a little, Nub. 496.

A.KAIP02,

,,
Iphig. T. 420.
},
impurity, Rev. 17. 4.
,
, defilement, Mat. 23. 27.
,
unseasonable, immoderate,
inconvenient — xxxipo- . ,
ouV
ult.
a moment.

,
not in the least, Dem. 1223.
xkxpsi, and

,
adv. shorth', in

of short distance or duration,


,
,
not more unfit or unqualified, I-r^. momentary, 2 Mace. 6. 25.

, ,
, .
7. 6. adv. unseasonably, exces- Dem. 1292. 2, a very short sail.
sively. ,
fruitless, barren unprofitable, —
uzxipix, ,
, unseasonableness, the want Mat. 13.22. — adv. without fruit.
opportunity, Dem. 16. 4. embarrassment.
-,, ?, sterility, fruitlessness, Eum. 804.

means,
AKAK02,
I want opportunity, have no
am

ous, guileless,
without mischief or
1154. 18.
destitute, Phil. 4. lb.
, xkxky^, , , not mischiev-
Rom. 16. 18. ,,
guile, artlessly,
adv.
Dem.
,
\,
, .
blameless, Tit. 2. 8.

invincible,
,
Nub. 1228.
,,„
not liable to be condemned,
fr.

, unveiled,
,
1 Cor. 11. 9.

not to be thrown down,


,
untried, condemned

'
axxyJix,

, , ,
ctKccA/iry;,

/,
:,

, '\-
t], freedom from mischief,
fensiveness, simplicity, Arist.Rhet.2. 12.15.
, 6, not causing mischief, an
inof- unheard, and without a trial, Acts 16. 37.

— ..),\\)\.
ov, 6, vj, not to be reconciled

,,, ,, ,
epithet of Mercury when bringing peace or or to be implacable

,
good fortune, benign, II.
and ,
. 158.
,
or irreconcileable, Polyb. 11. 29. 13.
,
not to be curbed or re-

,
6,

gently flowing. 422. pea, II. n. strained, 2 Pet. 2. 14. incessant, insatiable.
», and sec, unveiled, -oc,, unfashioned, rude.
unconcealed, in open day, CEd. T. 1429. , unstable, inconstant, Jam.
fr. , Philoct. 1341. 1. 8. fr. priv. and (•..
AKAMA2, and un- , , unruly,
commotion, Luke 21.
y, 9.

, , ,
wearied, never ceasing through weariness,
incessant, unwearied river, ever flowing, -, , Jam.
falsified,true,Herod.4. 191,
3. 8.

&, ,
II.

--^,
.
1

,
, ,
176. unwearied sun, never stopping,
II. . 239. unwearied///-?, inextinguishable,

, •. 3. fi\
ever bound, inextricable.
,,
ns» h, ai ">d
ing vessel, a galley, Agam. 994.
the middle mast, the hind mast
being called
,,a
and the foremast
swift-sail-

,
Prom. 426.

., ,
,
spear, brave,

, )
:, ,, . ,,, •,, -
.

i)\

a hardy warrior, Pyth. 4. 104.

-,
pace of thunder, Olym.
, indefatigable
6,
•>.
, indefatigable with the
Isthm.
6,

7. 13. ~hoy%m*

,.
having unwearied feet.
the high-sounding
in battle, ,,(for

3. plur.

a boat or skiff, Thuc. 4. 67.

f.
,
unburnt, A. 3. 5. S. x,
from
or

they were grieved


imp.
\,

by substituting
imp.
p. pass,
Ion. for

3. plur.
),
pass.
:

for and changing

,
4. 2.

,
st

#», , ,:,
, .,~~, , and inflex- into , ,
w,
176.

,
II.

-
,
ible, soil, having ny, II. s. 24, lest be should e 1

, {,
a soul unbent, brave, unyielding, Isthm. 4. completely overwhelmed with sorrow,
Man— -
, , — implacable I feel grief, am afflicted or di-
89. lr.
a place from which there is stressed, , \ %, on II.

,
:, ,
,
,,
no return,

, n, .
the grave, Antip. Sid. 101.
i. e.

,, , a thorn, Mat. IS. 7. the


vertebrae of the back, \\ xkyi.

., ,
made of thorns, thorn;/.
y, a little bird of various co-
lours, the linnet,
,
Theo. 7. 141.

. 486, do not excessively
my account.

unshorn, Apoilo, fr. a, xsspu,


scil.

a Syrochaldaic word, signifying


the place of blood, Acts 1.19.
,
unordered, of one's own ac-
afflict

, having
thyself

his locks

the brank ursine, or bear's-


6,

foot, the acanthus, Theo. 1. 5.


,, , cord, Ion. 1359. fr. , ).
-./, , not yielding smoke, dry- zvood,
Plut. 8. 504.
without smoke, Anthol. 2. 19".
an offering , ,, , KVJTia, Olym.
6, q,
1.

not having horns not


ungoaded, unlashed
33.

,
injuri-

Svuu, to feast on thins; without smoke, 1


; ous or vicious, i. e. innocent, harmless,
—— — ——
4)

,
Mat.
ravaged,
10. 16.
fr. ,
— unhurt
unadulterated, fr. —
by horns, ,
, i. e. un-
a Od. .
ov,
A KM
unhurt, not subject to decay,
738. fr. a, xyo, a wound or hurt.
50

,,
and

^,
6. 3. 6.

,
,
to mix. see Anthol. 2. 360.
unimpaired, fresh, entire, Polyb. 1. 40.
,
,
unprofitable, detrimental,

unprofitableness, detriment
^, ,
, )
, ,
.
ov, without a heart, heartless, timid,
II. , 392. fr. ,a heart.
ov, unproclaimed
fame, Heracl. 91.
not known to

war without truce, implacable war, fr. a,


,

hear)
i.
loss of credit, Olym.
(probably a corruption of

, ,,
e. I listen
I
am in the state of a person hearing,
1. 84.

— am lost in silent amazement, —


^,
, A. 3. 8. 4.
,
unalloyed, Herod. 9. 7.
Yi, ov, (for

mean, eilog
feeble, Od. a. 129.
less respectable in

,, ,
Apoll.
,,
axr\v,
i.

, , ,l.

adv. for

, ,
765. hence

in silence,
ov,

e. quietly, silently.
through profound attention,
II.
listening
. 85.
— quiet,
axoyv, while listening,
#«170, for
II. y. 95.
silent.

axoiqv,
form, not so handsome or majestic, Od. s.2 1 7.

weak.
,
short-lived impotence,
duced to ashes,
priv. or the Heb.
,
, having no strength,

lifeless, Theo. Epig.


kuch, strength.
Prom. 550,
being re-
1 1. a

,,, , ,
axvj, Dor. axa, Ion. vixa, or with si- a Persian scymetar, acinaces.

, ,,,
,
lence, calmly, gently, Pyth. 4. 278.
a point, edge, verge. Dem.
ov, not exposed to danger, safe,
150. 9. in safety or se-

,,,
h,

,
or

, ,
wound, heal, imp.
cured, II. . 448.
I
poet,
mend with a needle

—mend an
for
f.

—mend a
offence or mis-
they

-
curity,
tues which do not encounter danger, or
which shrink from danger, and therefore
not honourable
Olym.

adv. without
6. 14, vir-

^
deed, redress, expiate for danger, in security.
about to heal, in order to heal, II. ov, not to be moved, Thuc. 1.
. 29. mend a difficulty or 'perplexity, solve,
remove, .—
2. 7. 1. mend vessel, repair,— .—
71. undisturbed, unviolated, motionless,
1. 4. 4. things not to be

,, ,, , , ,,, . .
Od. . 383. mend an evil, alleviate, Med.
1 99.

, —
mend thirst, assuage, allay, II. . 2.

moved or meddled with, a grave, Hes. s.
433. fr. , ).

, ,, , , , ,
and ij, the point of a spear, sting.

— , — ,, cure, remedy. without a hand, idle, inactive, Theo.


-, , capable of being healed,
, , an epithet of Apollo
II. v.

as healer.
115. 28. 15. for ,
not to be found or overtaken.
ov,

,
?-, ,

2,
horses,

curer of
and
a healer— a mender of clothes — a tamer
of (Ed. E. 747.
, one who brings a remedy, a
all diseases, sc.

, careless,
death, Ion. 1005.
unconcerned, .
6,

, .,
pursuing inaccessible or
vain things, II. . 75.
cable temper, Prom. 180.
impla-

Ion. 701, not to be found by his friends.


ov, and unlamented,
without the usual tribute of mourning, II.
,,
,
-
II.

526. — unheeded, unburied, Od. v. 130. fr. . —


386. not mourning, without tears, Od.
, $. . ,
494.
uxYihroc, , uncared
-, for, un pitied, un- ,, ,,
fr.

inglorious, obscure,
,
,
6, 3j,

buried,

^,
II. . 60.
adv. without
care or pity, unmercifully, Del. Ep.
f. wc>i, I care not, am unconcerned ,
,,
more inglorious,
nour not known to fame, Olym.
, — or
,, an ho-
12. 22. fr.
ingloriously,

, ,,
for, Prom. 507.

^, ,,, ,
the dead by neglecting him, II.

,
tigated, implacable.

I neglect or dishonour
70.
the want of regard, neglect.
not to be soothed or mi-
•/\/
.
without fame or celebrity.
and

,. ,
, , not possess-
ing a lot or portion of land, poor, opp. to

,
fr. ,
,
Od.
uncalled,
. 489.
unsummoned,

,
,
sj,

,
,,
,
Trach. 999, this efflorescence of madness Ajax, 289. fr.

not to be soothed into repose, this inexo-


rable burst of madness.
, unbending, firm,
a resolute mind, Heb. 10. 22. fr. , -.

, ^, , , ,
;.205. fr.
ov, unmixed, pure, genuine, Od.

imperishable.
,
ov, unsoiled, pure,

not subject to decay,

unsullied or unpolluted bed, Orest. 574.

paired possessions,
undecayed or unim-
invio-
ov, unwashed by the sea, tranquil,
Iphig. A. 121. fr. , 7^.
yic, 37, (from axn) the point or edge

of any sharp instrument the point of time


at which a person or thing growing reaches
itsmaturity —
vigour— rviv
the height of summer the exact point of —

,
lable friendship. time in which an event is determined, a
1 I — — ———
AK
5
crisis, the matter , life, I am unchaste or licentious, Aves,
52

stands on the edge of the razor, it has

, ,
reached the critical moment. •£*%
scil. sfi, it is high time to go,E. Elect. 684.
for Mat. 15. 16,
,,
"Are
1225.
Ako'aoc, ov, y,
b'Dtt
fire,

i. e. fruits,
,
any thing to eat, food, Heb.
food not prepared by
Anthol. 1. 232. — a crust or
02,
)
you, even you, after having reached the mouthful of bread, Od. . 222.
critical moment in which you are required ov, 6, (one who goes in the
to be otherwise, are you, I say, still with- same way with another, fr. a for and

,
,,
out understanding?" Hence
times equivalent to adhuc,
see A. 4. 3. 19.
is some-

still, yet.


the edge of hunger, fa-
mine, 2 Mace. 1. 7. leisure, Ajax, 822. —
-,
»^»
,
,consequent
Dem. 1100. 14.
—follow a guide,
— follow a
accompany,
f. ,,
.
,&.
a follower, attendant

I follow
adjectively,
in conformity,

,
in full vigour, in perfection. 2. 4. 2. chief,
>, p. grow up to serve under, obey, join, E.
I — 3. 5. 10. fol-

,
f.

maturity, ripen, am ripe, E. — low a master, attend on, learn imitate,


1. 2. 3. of,
26. — follow an enemy, pursue,

,,
flourish, am vigorous, am in the bloom of John 12.
. chase — follow another on fidl speed, keep
life,

,
, , 4. 2. 19. p. 223, all things are ripe, requiring
attention,
crisis at
tention.
all things have reached the very
which they require the closest at-
is high time, Septem,98.

,
up with, equal,
must follow, O.
,
21. 7.
, the action
of following, pursuit -- attendance, K. 10. 5.
3. 3. 4.•

, ^, .
ov, grown up, flourishing, vigorous. Arist. Rhet. 3. 9. 7.
more prompt— full grown, ,
v\, the want of food, or accom-

, -, ,
. . ,
;,, Od. 1

ov,
92. luxuriant.
6, , abstaining from food, hungry,
modation, Od.
and
284. fr.

—unostentatious,
ov, 6, , without
—unquali-
,, from
320. — full
in the sense of hunger, II. r.
grown, flourishing, Od. -. 191.
the same with unwea-
pomp
fied, Hipp. 896.
unaptly, , ,.
modest
adv. inelegant-

,
ly, fr.

— ,<?,
,, ried,
,, II.
fr. ,
. 679.
a person whom no labour or
6,

attack can break down, an invincible war-


invincible, strong,
,
ov,
ij,
6, vj, not boasting, Septem,544.
a whetstone,
Olyra. 6. 141,
I have a praise for thee on the tongue of
,

,
,
rior, Persse, 51.

476.

. ,
,
, a priv.
ov,
. —
an instrument against
which no force can prevail anvil, II. .

, the place
which an an-
$,
in

a keen whetstone, I have praise for thee
on a tongue keenly edged by a sense of thy
glory, my tongue shall bestow on thee the
tribute of eloquent praise, ukovyj a

, , ,. ,
vil is laid, a block. 476. II. a. whetstone of the soul, i. e. love.
ov, inflexible, robust, invincible, f. I sharpen, quicken,
.
7. 5. 20, they sharpened their

, ,
Pyth. 4. 128. written also

,
ov, or not having the nap swords each for himself.

/, ,taken off, unfulled, new, Mat. 9. 1 6.


vj, the spine of the back in qua- from , to .
without dust, without astruggle,
6. 3. .
, drupeds,
,,
(5i^yj75"/y,ontheback,Od.^.l61.
hearing— the sense of hearing,
ov, ,
aconitum, a poisonous plant
called the wolf's bane, or hemlock, so

,
,
. ', , , ,
the ear, At. 1. 4. 6. the thing heard,
fame, report, discourse the name, Her. F.
963. fr.

. ,


Theo.
ov, 6, y, sleepless, vigilant,
13. 44. sleepless stream, ever flowing, Prom.
139. from a priv. and
dart, javelin.
aKovTihov, ov, a
called from its sharp point.

AKONTION,
the wolf's bane, poisonous.
rh
dim. of

,
ov, or ,
a small spear used generally in hunting, a

little dart, .
6. 2. 7. p. 365.

, ,
, , ,-
.
ov, 6, partner of a bed, a husband, f. I hurl a javelin— shoot,
II. o. 91. fr. a for and smite with an arrow I wound, 1.4. 8. — .
-, , a wife, consort, Theo. 17. 39. Od. . 229.
,
ij,

ov, 6, q, uncorrected — dissolute, shooting, throwing the javelin.

-^ , , ,
-,, -,
immodest from want of connection in-
solent, Orest. 10. Hec. 605.
the —
shooting, hurling the javelin
, and ov, ,

,
-, .
very intemperate—

^ , ,
intemperately.
too extravagant or excessive, ,


,,
I
adv. too
to be

intemperance,
licentiousness,
lead a wanton or
. to -
1. 5.
dissolute
an archer,
within a dart's cast, E.

dier, Theo.

lin, a trial
ov, 6,

,
.
1

of
7.
and
2.

jj.
55.

skill in
1. 2. — a light-armed
the art of throwing a jave-
shooting, 11. -. 622.
4. 4. 6.

:, shooter,
sol-
— —

,
, ,
53

throwing the javelin,


, ov, expert in
. 6. 2. 3.
shooting or tively)
montory, E. 1.6. 19. a cape,

,
A
the highest point, summit

. —
,,
pro-
54

, , , ,, ^,
, and
does not feel labour or fatigue, unwearied,
hardy, 1. 1. 6.
, —
,


sj, one who

,
,,
from the extremity or top, utterly, II.
q, a citadel, for
a, ov, of the citadel,
the guardian goddess cf the citadel,
. 728.
§,
Med.

,
6,
greedy, fond of— greedy offood, insatiable 1376.
—greedy of
,360.

,,
.
, ,
,,
,
.,. labour, indefatigable, Pyth. 4.

tiable lamentation, i.e. incessant,fr.


S. Elect. 123, insa-
,
. 138. ineffectual, Od. . 202.
,, high, brisk
unaccomplished,

— serene, an epi-
II.


44.

medy

,,
Od.
,,
,

. ,
,.
,
ov,

.
481. U. . 250.
unbrushed, unpolished, Nubes,
to brush.
a re-
cure, help,
of evils, a means of expiating them,

AK02M02, ov, inelegant— disorderly in- —


thet of the wind, as
places,

command
, , unmixed,
,,
over one's
when
Od. .
it

421.

(pen. short) having


self,
blows on high

pure, Hec. 535.

intemperate,
no
li-

,
,
derly,
,
subordinate, mutinous, II. . 213.

, ,
am
f. I
insubordinate or disobedient,

,
am inelegant, act disor-
centious,

,
Ar. opp. to
4. 5. 4.
adv. intemperately, extravagantly.
to be intemperate.

,
Antig. 741. Philoct. 391. , intemperance, licentiousness.
unadorned, 0. 11. 9. disabled through sickness,

propriety
,
, the want of ornament or of
Iphig. A. 317, ", weak, invalid, Philoct. 492.
I am intemperate or inconti-

,
insolence of words, the words of a man nent, Arist. Ethic, yj. 2.

dination.
, )
who is inattentive to authority and subor-

adv. without order or regard to AKPAT02, ov,


ov,
rance, Arist. Rhet. 2.
proceeding from intempe-

cr
1 6. 4.
(from ,

,—
,
subordination, insubordinately, Persae, 374.

,
basely,

, , Herod. 7. 220.
unmixed, genuine— pure, strong, A.
19. ijlovai, pleasures unalloyed
4. 5.

,, ,, q, barley, hence I with pain, 6 the mind sepa-

,,
f.

,.
feed with barley, II. . 506. rated from the contagion of the body.

,,
to

, , . ,
, , sj, childless, fr.
a, ov, involuntary, unwilling,
,
Arist. Ethic. 3. 3. Air. 2. I. 18.
,
-.

opp.
64.

12.
unmixed
ened by a shade, burning heat, Antiphil.
heat,

unsullied branch,
i. e. unsoft-

i. e.

,, , ,
, /, . f.

Att.
f.
,
by sync,
adv. against the will,
aor. 1.

I hear, at-

aor. 2.
p.
fr.

vjkov.
m.
hence
whose choice

315.
, v\,
fruits have not been culled.
unmixed, perfect wisdom,

mixture, grossness, de-

33.
,
tend, listen to

) \,,,, ,
.
hear a superior, obey

,
hear a master, learn, comprehend, Mark 4.

, v, he who hears or obeys, a

hearer, ldarner.
(from the form aor. 1.
I am heard, proclaimed, divulged, Luke
f.
bauchery, intemperance, Mat. 23. 25. Pint.
2. 560. excessive desire of plunder, Polyb.
4. 6. 10.
from a and
But in this sense it is derived

unmixed, strong wine, Theo. 14. 1 8.

, , -,
1 3. 3. The active form with and - I
or
drink pure wine, carouse, Plutus, 295.
, , , not having broken his
f.

,
has a pass, sense, I hear

,
myself well spoken of, am praised, fast, hungry, fasting. The word occurs only
I hear myself ill spoken of, am re- in Theo. 1.51, and the attempts to explain


,
proached, cursed,

, , , , ^ ,,
be deemed hard-hearted, Pallad. 99.

I am
f.

called, invited,
I shall

343.
a thing heard, report.
ro,
I use
II.
my ears, I listen
.
it have hitherto been vain. A boy, regard-
less of a wallet that contained his food,
was intent on catching locusts or grass-
hoppers. A fox sees him, and determines
to rob him of his wallet ;
,-, a, ov, to be heard,

,
it is ]

,
,
necessary to hear, must hear or obey,
Iphig. A. 1010.
,
o,ahearer, disciple, Arist. Poet.64.
that he

locusts,
would not leave him until he should
make him, though hungry, feast on the dry
here means the dry limbs of
^-
,
,
yi, ov, capable of hearing, the locusts, in contradistinction to

,
, ,
the sense of hearing disposed to
hear, obedient, Arist. Ethic, a. 13.
rt, ov, may bcheard, audible,

,
, (fcm. of
1 6. 2.

used substan- ,

. .
the juice of the grapes on which the
fox feasted. The source of the expression
is the alliteration between

and in the next line. Locusts


2
— — —— —

,
55

,, ,
are known to have been used in the ab-
sence of other food, see Mat. 3.
or ,,, ov, o, q, extremely
AKPOAOMAI,

,
f.
AKP
,,
hear, listen to, attend on a person as a dis-
ciple or scholar, E. 7. 3. 3.— learn
,,
p. ,,
,-
56
I

,,
irascible, Theo. 24. 60. versed in, 2. 3. 6. attending to. see

,,
,
, a branch hanging on the Arist. Rhet. 1. 1. 10.

,
top, fir. a augment, and or fr. ax^oc, a, ov, to be heard it
as being the «highest branch, Theo. 16. 94. isnecessary to hear or attend to, Aves, 1 225.

,, Theo.
adv. at the close of evening, fr.
24. 75.
,, hearing, obedience, Thuc.
2. 37. disputation, Plut. 3. 794.
^-, and ^/, , 6, q, verging on ,
a place to hear in, au-

,,
ov, ov,
manhood,
youth,
AKPIBH2,
Theo.
fr.

,
}.
eri,

-, —
893, yet a
/,—
ditory, audience, Acts 25. 23.
ov, 6, a hearer, Rom. 2. 13. dis-


(pen. long) ac-
c. ciple reader, precentor.
curate, correct, scrupulous
-^,
exact, or ex-

,,
AKP02, a, ov, raised to a point, sharp, from

,
actly made, the most extreme— furthest eminent, con-

,
, &
rigid sect, Acts 26. 5. adv. dili- summate. In English it must be often ren-
gently, with exactness, accurately. dered as a noun, in their
,

,
q, accuracy, correctness, ex- extreme hands, in their fingers,
actness, 7$, sweet to the extremity, extremely
, ,
,
Acts 22. 3, according to the rigid
interpretation of our paternal laws
ligent research or pursuit.

/, on ),
ov, 6,
a di-

q, strictly just, scil.


the worse side, Arist. Ethic, e. 10.
,, ,

sweet, scil.

man not extreme in soul, a man not very


eminent or acute, Herod. 5. 124.
the Pelasgians were the
extremities, the most eminent men of the
Argives. 6 the extremities of moun-
a

,
I investigate or cultivate

,
f.

, a thing with diligence and correctness,


learn or execute accurately
acquainted with, .
I am fully
]. 3. 14. 2. 2. 2.

-
,
tains, the cliffs, to carry
away for himself, obtain, the highest ho-
nours, Anthol. 2. 151. axoa

-, . ,
Eccles. 162, will be scrupulously thou walkest on tip-toes, see Posidip. 1 3.
examined. said of time ever on the wing adv.
,,

,^,
f. I state with accu- extremely, very, K. 5. 30.
racy, Dem. 232. —
5. minutely calculate, I walk on tip-toes, —
insist on minute points, 307. 9. walk straight,
yvjTsav, it is necessary to speak with accu-
racy, Arist. Rhet. 3. 1. 10.
%7.\, , ,
treme distance, sharply pointed.
sharp-shot, or shot at ex-

UKniZo'hoyia,

/?, ,,
,
q, an accurate scrutiny, a
correct description or discussion, fr.
q, a grasshopper, Theo. 5. 34.
. %~,
,,
f. qao>, and

shoot at a distance, skirmish,


I
4. 23. A. 3. 4. 10.
1.
f.

.
<-

q, the hunting of locusts, a ,


,,
axQioour^a, a-AQO^oTutjtc, or q, also

locust-trap,

mountain.
Theo. 1. 52.

,
the highest point, summit of a
q,
Od. . 281,
thou walkest through craggy places, tread-
ov, , fighting at a distance

%\, , .
of a battle, skirmishing.

-,
soldier,
the prelude

ov, 6, a skirmisher, a light-armed

). ^,(,,
fr.
est on dangerous ground. ov, 6, uncircumcised, pu-
AKPITQ2, ov, indiscriminate, confused, II.
vi. 337. rash— uncondemnned, untried un- —
dendum, and
take away the -
fore-skin, circumcise,
f. I

,
,
.
ous, immense,

289.

determined indecisive,

eye, lustful, Anthol. 2.


,
could be settled by no common tribunal,

',
vast, general, Dem. 231. 8. fr.
and
,,
.
490.—
796. injudici-
a depraved
endless sleep,
a quarrel which

,
adverbially, indiscri-
. ,
.
-, ,
to
q, the fore-skin which covers the
gland of the penis uncircumcision the

tion stone,
axpohpya, ,,
1

uncircumcised, a heathen, Rom. 2. 26. opp.

ov, the chief corner, founda-


Pet. 2. 6. Ephes. 2. 20. fr.
things growing at the ex-

.
,
minately, without judgment or trial. tremities of trees, the fruits of trees, i. e.

,:, ,,
, q, the want of judgment, confu-
sion, commotion, E. 7. 5. 27. fr.
q, indiscriminate in speech,
, . nuts, acorns
fr. —

fruit-bearing trees, O. 19. 12.
choice trees, such as those in a
garden or plantation, Dem. 1251. 22.
,.
^, . ,
petulant, impertinent, 11. 246. . ukpoUiviov, ov, , the first fruits of the corn
ov, having innumerable leaves, offered in sacrifice after harvest, part of
very thick or luxuriant. II. . 868. the spoils taken in war offered to the gods

,
,

ov, huddled in vast confusion, — offered fruits of any kind,Heb. 7.4.Phccn.


iicptem, 366. 289. fr. .9/-. or §iv, a heap of corn.
— —a — —a

,, ,,
57
f. I select the first , ,,
AAA
the cutting off the extremi-
58

^,
fruits asproper to offer in sacrifice for my-
Here. F. 476.
self,
I grow black at the surface.
^,
ties,

,
mutilation,
,
Eum.
the summit of a mountain
ctg,

whence water flows, xkqov, a cliff,


188.

, >. ,
.
/asyxg §sog sx XKQOKihxivioow, Theo. 25. 32.
II.

,,
,. 249, the great god of the stream rose
against him in dusky frowning waves, xx^og,

.[, ,
with hair or
or
foliage, .
,
533.
6,

-
crowned
, a, ov, to be led

broken, from
r,g,
it is neces-
sary to lead, must lead, the verbal of
„ termination of
(fern,

,
to break) broken, bruised
earth, sc. yq (so ripa is but a frag-

,
II.

, ^)
xo/uoig

~, ,.
Phcen. 1517, about
the leaf-crowned branches of the oak, fr.

, , (erroneously
•/• /,
,
,
ment) a bank, beach, shore— broken fruits
of the ground, ground corn, meal, bread.
the broken
sc.

,,
or bounty of Ceres, meal, bread, Hipp. 1 38.
sc.

, .
written
der of a net. xx$og,
,,
. 2. 7, the rim or bor-

(neut. termination of
the ancient name of Attica, as lined
with a rocky shore, hence Attica for Actica.
I ascend or clamber up a shore, or
used substantively) the furthest point or
extremity of a thing, end— the extremity
of an army, the furthest wing— the extre-
mity of a mountain, the top or summit
fortress or citadel on the top of a moun-
Eum. 36.


, ,
a rocky place, wind round as a shore,

/, ,
and a, ov, seated on the
shore, a guardian of the shore, Theo. 5. 14.
ovog, and ,
tain, A. 5. 2. 12.
or rugged cliffs.
^.,
. xxqx, the eminences
A-ATig, or ,
hog,
, s?, one
without possessioiijpooi^fr.^r^ajf, 11./. 126.
,
a broken part of the

sog, 6, q, labouring under the
highest pitch of insanity, Herod. 5. 42.
..',, , or sag, , the highest part of ,
sun, a ray, a beam

,
splendour, lustre—
flash of lightning, athunderbolt,Pyth. 4.352.
ooog, 6, a leader, fr. ay , Septem, 561.
,
,,
a city, the citadel, Od. Sr. 494.
-',
,
,,
ov, reaching the pole, lofty, from
II. s. 522.

piercing, sharp, Od. y. 463.


Axvuog,
6, fruit of the ilex, acorn of the

holm-oak, fr. Heb. *?Dtt, to eat.


,
, a female that does not con-
/,,
ceive, barren, Call. 2. 53.
— ,

. ,,
, , extremely or eminently
, —
ov /uog, ov

,.
wise, a wise statesman, Olym. 11. 19. free from waves, smooth, barren,
,,
.- . -
eatQoroTiioi, the ornaments with which Andr. 158.
the fore part of a ship was decorated, called AzDQog, ov, unsanctioned, unratified unau-
also or thorized, or destitute of authority,
,

, , Dem. 437. 26, you

,
eg, extremely apt to stumble S7?(fc{£Y}TS ovTxg

, /. ,-,,, ,
precipitate, Long. 22. 4. headstrong should show they have no authority over
adv. with extreme proneness to you. "tzoihv, to render of no effect,

stumble. I am very apt to to annul or degrade, A. 6. 1. 18.


slip or stumble. Dem. 700. 16,
,, the very tribunals destitute of the right to impose

),
scil.


,
close of an oracle, Thuc. 2. 17. fr.

i. e. arms,

^,, ,,
,,

,.
extremity of the land, a
fines

promontory extremities of the body, limbs, lidate, Mat. 15. 6.


nose, ears, &c. —
extremities of
revoked, uncertain gifts, 467. 28.
f. I deprive of authority, inva-

ov, unratified, Ion. 801. fr.

,, ,
,

,, ,,-,,, , <?,
a ship, its ornaments. , a spike, point, fr. xkyi, II. 253. .
I cut off the ex- )7\,
ov, unhindered. adv.
f.

tremities, mutilate, Dem. 324. 22.


.
without impediment, fr. and
ovTog, , a dart, being not so jjonderous
).
,
6. 2. 24, having
stripped the galleys of their ornaments in as the spear, fr. xkyi, U. . 456.
front. This indignity offered to the con- ov, for unwilling.
quered stands seemingly opposed to what and ,, , a ,
Achilles says, II. x. 170, when he threatens smooth white stone, which the ancients
to retnrn " with his top-crowned ships," excavated into a vessel, the onyx-stone

-,
,
i. e. ships bearing no marks of defeat. a box of perfumes, Mark 14. 3.

,,
xxgoTyg, YiTog, , extremity, summit, the
highest perfection, Long. i. 3.
I wrestle or grapple with an
Theo. 15. 114, golden alabas-
ters, i. e. boxes of alabaster enamelled
with gold.
antagonist with the fingers only, I spar,
Luc. 2. 274.
^;, ov, unconcealed, fr. , . ovoc, 6, tj, (In the strict sense this
epithet is applied to a man who pretends
to be what he is not, or professes to do
—— — — — —
59

,
what he

,, ,
boasting
Ethic. /.

7.
is not qualified for) arrogant-
vain-glorious—-haughty, Arist.

boast, am osten-
, ,)
515. ).
blind watching, a negligent look-out,

or
other form of
|, (seemingly an-
f.

take off the peel or


I
II.
60
.

, ,,
f. I
tatiousor vain-glorious— I urge false claims. shell, uncover — uncover a city, dismantle,
arrogance, ostentation, plunder, ravage, Septem, 47. II. /3. 367.
A*r. 1. 7. 5. break through an enemy, U. . 166. rout,

,,,,,,
tious,

stray, imp.

,,
II.

,,
. 201.
-,
pompous,
,), arrogance — pomp, boasting.

for
y, ov,

adv. arrogantly, haughtily.


f.

about, roam, Od. y. 73. imperat.


prone to vanity, ostenta-
Act. 1. 2. 5.

for
I wander, rove,
he wandered,

,
they sail
for
.
destroy. Suidas and others after him sup-
pose the primary sense is to evacuate,

, ,— ,
pitality
sal,
sub,
y, ov, broken down, weak, ex-
hausted, easy to be taken, II.
and

by prefixing
,

sudor.

675.

the sea salt water, brine, hence


s,
v.

„ salt hos-
as in
, .

super,

1.
do thou wander, e. 377. aor.
^/\, I wandered, . 120.
for rable, (for
ov, not to be forgotten, ever
•/\, a and
priv. not to ) memo-

, , ,
mtc$ £/z<? genitive

:, ,
,
he deviates jfm»
jot/, plunges in sorrow, Olym. 1. 94.
be forgotten for having done some heinous
crime, infamous, odious, detestable,

,
&,
,
inf.

, —, , , ,
Androm. 306.
I wander
yc,
from I wander.
thou hast been roving, Od. o. 10.
to rove about, 284. imp.
they wandered, led a roving life,
.

in mind, rave, Orest. 531.


to — ,
grief the cause of which ever
dwells in the mind, deep, U. a. 105.

the cause of
santly, Od. . 108.
it,
I mourn ever remembering
mourn inconsolably inces-
#?, Phoen.
343, these things are not to be forgotten
by thy mother, these will be ever odious
-

,
, ,
x,. 464. -, ,
the wandering of a vagabond, roving, Od.

, —
a vagabond, Ajax, 381.

-, , —
to thy mother.
f. I cannot forget evils, resent,

, ,,
ov, 6 , q, wanderer, feel indignant, II. o. 21.
a vagrant, Od. q, 376. , an offender never to be for-
— —
, , ),
wander, lead the life of a vagrant, gotten, an assassin, Eum. 231. fiend evil

,Od. q. 501. hence


grant,
i. e. useless,

,
sctl.
vain,
, , a cry made by
of a va-
a wandering way,
Theo. 16. 9.
, ,

soldiers when
genius,
02, £, ,
demon.

/, ov, c.
ous, painful, Helen. 260.
grief, woe,
%.,
II. a. 4.
sad, griev-
that

,
going to battle, a martial shout, shouting which troublesome, trouble, vexation
is

,
, , ,
,,
warbling, singing, Helen. 1 360. It is the

,,,
name of God, btt, the mighty One or the
God of Hosts, redoubled bttbti.

, >
0fAys/t'iu£,adv.grievousl3',withpainor sorrow.
f. I feel pain, grieve,
I have the head-ache,
sc.

, ,, .
f. I vociferate, shout as is Theo. 3. 52. Od. 27,
usual with soldiers going to battle, 3. . saddened or frozen with sorrows, algeo.
2. 4.
, Olym. 7. 68. , q, ,

,
-, , , ,
,
,
,, ,
, , a shout, acclamation,
Phoen. 347. — sound, melody, Helen. 1368,

, , , a shout,
, and grief,pain, trouble,
Thesm. 146.
ov, more
grievous, very sad.
sorrow, Med. 24.

,
436. II. . ' .
279, it is sad, it is hard
II.

, ,
ov, not to be expressed, secret, or painful for him, used in the sense of the

, ,
,
ineffable, Rom. 8. 26. things positive, Od. or. 147.

. ,
,
not to be divulged, mysteries. superl. most sad, very grievous,

, ward support. see Hence the most grievous things, Thuc. 7. 68.

.,
L• Minerva, the helper, f. I cause to grieve, give pain,

, .

, ,
8. afflict, Med. 397. I feel pain,
II.

,am

,,
,
, , . ,
-
faint-hearted,
a, ov, in Horn.
Od.
II. x. 94.
I


a
sink, swoon,

ov,
am afflicted, I grieve,
f.

— f.
— ^^,
imp.
8. Med. 398.
or
I feed, nourish,

, invigorate, maintain, Theo. 17. 78.
-
blind, k. 493. dark, priv. cause

,
,
,
aor.
eye,

,
1.
f.

Od.
,,
,
k. 69.

dimness of
,
I render blind, with a genitive,
for

blindness,
sight,
Ion.
Od.
deprived of his

s. 503.
ahaoi-

n<, jj, a
to grow, cherish, increase.

porting a large vigorous body,


grown and vigorous body, supporting them-
selves in the vigour of age. This verb
to have originated in
Septem, 12, sup-

I
i.

grind-—
e. a full-

seems
— — —— — —

,,
61
meaning, feed, in conse-
,,,
,;,,,&\,.668.
, ,
62

, ,
quence of grinding, see Theo. 17. 78. II. if. f. hence the new verb

,
,
599. Od.
£, ,
. 69. or

f. I keep, ward, avert off)

,
, avoiding, escaping, refuge, from an defend, protect,

,
evil I 251.
assist, II. /.

II. . 301. s. 779. I defend myself, avenge,


and without the augm.

,
imp. viheetpov, retaliate, A. 5. 5. 10. aor. 1.

. ,,.
,, .
1 avoid, decline, shun, II. . 32. m. having defended ourselves, Od. /. 57.
£>5, , , heat, . 23. from ,
, q, warding off the wind or

,
,
Od.

,
;.
I warm, heat.
759. Plut.

,, , ,, ,
n, ov, warm,
9. 759.
tepid, mild —to
heated,

be
cold, warm, Od. . 529.

disease, a charm, remedy, Prom. 485.


,
the means of averting

,
,,
avoided, Phocyl. 33.

,
f. , (>,
and ,
mind, esteem, value, II.

. ,
f. I care,
388. a. 160.
1 am esteemed, classed with.
.
fender, helper,

against danger,
and

a,
6, a de-

II.

ov,
fit
. 396.
capable of defending
for repelling,

,
take care prepare, pro- Hercul. F. 470, a club calculated to

^,
f. I of,

, ,
vide,

*
from

,
Od. a. 374. . 185. from
bringing or requiring care,
r„ ov,
sorrow-bringing, painful,
It. v. 569, distress- bringing Mars,
repel or chastise violence
guardian, Septem, 8.
which protects, protection,
,,,
a protector or
a thing

a repeller or averter of

Iir. 5. 6.

, , , &,
mournful,

, - -, .
sorrow-bringing evil, a benign genius, an epithet of those

,,
floods, overwhelming, . 749.
sorrow-bringing courage, courage
which causes sorrow and mourning,
£37, a title of Minerva, from the Heb. ^*,
ala, mighty, hence
457.

n, ov, belonging
.
gods which guarded men from disease or
danger, opp. to

tutelary,
6, yj,

fr.
fr.

,
protecting mortals,

Pyth. 5. 122, rites calculated to protect


, , ., ,, ,,
to Apollo or Minerva. mortals and prolong their lives.
*,
, ., -
seemingly another form of
blind, closing the eyes in darkness, sound
sleej), Philoct. 879.
tor, (Ed. T. 163.
f. 7\oo) or ),
,
6, vj, averting death

p.
protec-

pass.

, and wheat-meal, Att. (from £/£> to turn,

, , ., ,
flower,
ley-meal
fr.

,,
is
to grind,
called
and
Od.

,
v.108. Bar-

a goblet, Herod.
because grinding is performed
by turning round), I grind corn, Nub. 1361.
23.

, , ,, , , ,
6, 7.
so called from its rough outside, figures fut. I grind, crush, pound,
being embossed upon it, 11. 773. fr. . , Mat. 24. 41.
,
, a grinder, fr. a malefac- ,
6, grinding— 6, a mill.

, , a grinding-stone,

,, , , ,
tor, pest, malefactors or slaves being con- or an upper


, ,
fined to grind corn by way of punishment
or one who neglects the gods, a violator
, , , /,
mill-stone.
Mat. 1 7. 6,
This
and
is called
,, Luke 1 7. 2.

,
of the divine laws,a sinner, II. y. 28. , a grinder, , a

,,
aor. 2.
by sync,
, othtrsa, f.
I neglect the gods,
— or


female that grinds, Od.
f. I grind, mill,
v. 105.
Od. n- 105.

,
offend, sin, transgress,
injure,

^.
II.

services to the state,


/.

f.
375.

-,
,
p. ,,,
Od. . 108.

exempt from
Dem. 256. 10.

m.

insult,

excessive
fr. a,

I
,
, ,, ,
Theo.
f.

Septem, 87.
, ground wheat,
14. 7.
or —
aor. 1. m.
I avert from myself, II. . 34. avoid, inf.
with the genitive, to turn myself
flour, see

I avoid, avert,

>-
, \, .

,
anoint with oi!, Od. ,. 177. daub, be- from, to avoid the stone, II. 340.
smear, Herod. 3. 8. I am for with the accus. lest he

,
,anointed, or anoint myself, Mat. 6. 1 7. perf. should escape me, Od. . 396.
), , , \, y, escape, refuge, II. ,

,< - , ,
part.ecA)9a/i« w£i/oi-,beinganointed,Thuc.4.68. 57.

, ,
(

, , ointment,
,
fat, II. . 463. Dor. unconcealed,
, , a person who anoints with .
open, sincere, honest, II. 433. Olym. 2.
.
,
oil, anointer, alipta, master of the palaestra.
,£ 167. plain, true, truth,Od. 247.

,
and , the things true, the truth, v. 254.

,mate of a hen, a cock. comp.

,?
real, super,

for and .
Olym. 12. 20, as a cock which fights
at home or on his own dunghill, from a

;, , the crowing of a cock.


adverbially,
ner — real,
most
«j
truly, in the truest

hunting is the most real


of the things exercised for war, hunting is
man-
— — — —

, 0
63

,.
an exercise which comes nearest to the
, . not separating, not yielding,
ov,
64

,
,,
things which really occur in war.
and
with sincerity,
adv. truly, in truth,

, ov, having the character and


qualities of truth, true— true God, opp. to
idols which are false, 1 Thess. 1. 9. true
,
, —
'
and therefore not ceasing vehement, fu-
rious, II.
cub. 85.

sailed by the
.
471. . 797.
,
ov,
vehemently, He- —

towering above the sea, or as-
sea, lofty, E. Supp. 79.
a, ov, like, II. . 401. hence alike.
testimony, faithful and therefore to be be-

, . ,, AhnqKYii, , eoc, sea-girt, walled by the sea,


lieved, John 19. 35. —
true friend, sincere
true army, actual, effective, A. 1. 9. 10.
true bread, i. e. bread of the soul, of which
the bread that feeds the body is but a sha- ,
, , ,,,
-
'
Olym.

fish,
,
8. 34.
6, a fisherman.

catch fishes, John 21. 31.


f.

, ov, fit for catching fishes,


I

,
dow, moral, intellectual, John 17. 3. 1. 9. a fishing-boat, A. 7. 1. 13.

, ,
— —
,, ,
real, and not pretended or vain ),
-,
natural, f. I collect, see

,
and not I collect myself, A. 6. 3. 1. being

,.
artificial.
adv. truly, really, O. 10. 8. collected or assembled.
,
,
to seek true glory. f. I salt, sprinkle with salt, from

, ,,,
be sea-

,
f. I speak the salt shall
truth, prove true,

hood —
,,
1.

reality, truth, opp. to false-


a thing true, h
he that doeth the truth, i. e. true miracles,
,
1.5. Gal. 4. 16.
speak the truth, Herod. 1. 136. , .- soned with

by the sea-dashing
salt,
ov, sea-girt,
soc, fitted
Mark 9.

for the sea.


49.
a girdle.
,
Hecub. 455, conveyed
oar.

, ,
John 3. 21. the true doctrine of Christ, foolish, vain, Theo. 16.

,
for riAiuioc,
2 Cor. 11. 10.

equity, kxt

purity, or the genuine un-
eorrupted state of a thing, 1 John 3. 8.
according to the '
4.
ov,
A/;^Ay?-of,o2/,sea-washed. Ajax, 1219. ,.
foolishly, in vain, 10. 40.
having no stones, a, priv.

, , , .
real character, and not to the outside or

appearance, Rom. 2. 2. sincerity, John 4. ships —
ov, weather-beaten
sea-beaten,
sounding by the dashing of the
24.

,

,
, ,
the reality of the Gospel, in opp. to

,
or the shadows, which pre-signined
it under the law, John 1. 17. see O. 10. 2.

,
light, opp. to Dem. 281. 2.— real
action or fact, opp. to preparation or dis-
waves, roaring, Hipp. 754.
,, , ov, of salt, saline.
for how great,
the sea, Neptune.
ovtoc, ruling
ov, having no harbour, dangerous,
Theo. 4. 55.

,
cipline, Polyb. 1. 84. 6; 1. 21. 3. rocky shore, kxqoixv, Cycl. 348,

, ,
', ,
or
studious of truth, Arist.Ethic.c>.3.

.
, v\, having not a corn-field, with-

, % ,,.. , ,,
,
out a farm, poor, II. ;. 125.
,
wearied, Trach. 987. II. . 12.
priv.
, ij, incessant, un-

ov, not to be taken or caught


priv.
in-
,.

a harbourless heart, i. e. a heart affording
no refuge to those who seek rest from the
storms of life, priv.
q, a want of harbour, in-
commodiousness for landing or anchoring,
E. 4. 8. 7.

2, ,
comprehensible, inflowing with noise andim-
'
priv. or
gathered, condensed, Herod. 1. petuosityinto the sea, sea-flowing, 11. 190. .

,,, , ,, ,,
196. 2. 63, ,
ov, of the sea, marine, II. x. 538.
to them collected the name is Atlantes, they in vain, fruitless, ineffectual, the sea ivater

,, , , ,
collectively have the

collect themselves,

,
lected, 7. 714.

,
name of Atlantes.
I collect, gather, aor. 2.
or YfhY\v, inf.
. 823. to be col-
II.

contracted himself,
to '
being unfit for drink, and unfavourable to
fecundity, . 26.
ov, sun-burnt, Theo. 10. 27.
and
born and educated in the sea, sea-nursed.
,
crouched, v. 408.
lected, .
12. part,
f. they col-
having collected
himself for the purpose of exerting his

,, ,,
7^,
, ,~,
, Od. . 442.
f.

for
I render fruitless aor. 1.
intransitively, was not

, , ,,
,
strength, 80S.
Ion.
heap, assembly, Herod. 1. 125.
imp.
v\,

heal, mend,
a collection, a
r
vain, II.

,,,
AA0.Q,
.733.\\., to frustrate,*. 104.
f.

tured or found out


poet,
— am
I

to be ,
am caught, cap-
detected inf. —
-,
,
'
II. £.417.

,
breeze, Od. . 360. , .—
blowing from the sea, a sea-

ov, '6, a sea-eagle


bald buzzard, Aves, 802.
an osprey, a
caught, II.
3. sing,
tat, /,,
253. subjunet.
be caught, II
or
.
281. aor. 2.
was captured, Od. %. 230. op-

, , ,,,
or x~hu)v\v, I shall be slain, II.

.
or
405. part,
if I
;,
.
—a

,
,
65
, , ,
being caught, f. m.

-, , ,
shall be caught or found having betrayed
I
£
Troad. 587.
the rock, an anchor, Pyth.
AAA
a fastener of
10. 81.
66

-, ,

,
,

,
shall be found to have betrayed, perf.
,, ,, I have been taken, am
a, ou,
~,.,,, mighiy— valiant, Olym.
and

,
s
9. 1 1 0.
found, having lied I , 6, son of strength, Hercules.
— ,
,
have been found out have been detected 6, Alcaeus, a poet of Lesbos.

, .
in lying.

^
,.
, ou,
inginthe sea, sea-floating, Ajax, 597.
sea-beaten, Call. 4. 11.
, , wander-
.'!/,
'
A\x,vau,
6, , magnanimous.
the daughter iEolus and
ij,

Canobe, and wife of Ceus, supposed to


have been changed into a sea-fowl—
$.

,
,
,
. the sea.
ou, floating in the sea—
Sew, II.

-
ou,
.
26, that he might cause
the walls to float (i. e. disperse them) in

sea-purple, azure,
ou, sea-floating
Od. .
sand, Antip. Sid. 68.
53.
mournful bird, Apoll. 4. 363. This bird
produces her young amongst the sea-weed,
and is hence called, from ahi xvstv.
During the days of her incubation, i. e.
seven before and seven after the winter
solstice, the weather is said to have been

, ,, ,
, ,, ,
ou, flowing to the sea, Ajax, 412. calm. Hence the fabulous notion of
—sea-dashed, Hipp. 1205. ahwouihai, halcyon days, days of tran-

,
'

'
865.

,
,
1 5.
on
fr. , .ou,

adv. enough,
f.

pollution.
,
or

,,
washed by the

II.

I pollute,
Acts
20, the impure indulgences attending
idol sacrifices.
I catch, seize, ,,, am
sea.

y.384. see
M.

/.
Supp.

caught,
,,
,
quillity

repel,
,,
II. .
and

ward
bliss.

off,

avert, inf. xkxhxziu,
to keep
153. Od. y. 237. imp.
drive away,

averted, Olym. 10. 125. defend.

off an attack
6, a person
for

who repels
— a protector, averter, Od. .
,
f.

ahx\-

or wards
I

'
,
captured, detected, Aw. 3. 12. 2.

-, .,, was taken,


ou,
5. 1. 1. see
reflecting
. imp. >?/-

hollow sound from


340.
AAAA, a conjunction, but — except— and
yet, nevertheless — moreover— on the con-
the sea. ahisouoi Prom. 737, sea- no — however— well, be
trary, it so.

sounding rocks, i. e. deeply caverned, so But if we attend to the original meaning of

,
-,. ,
,
as to reflect the hollow murmurs of the
sea.

— ~\,,
and
ou, salted,

contr.
f. yea, or

I neglect the service


, Pallad. 21.
by syncope
pass. x~hiry\-
of the gods, err,
aKhx, we shall find that in all cases it has

plural of ,
but one acceptation. For it is the neuter
taken adverbially, another
thing. Thus, " Not every one that saith
unto me Lord, Lord, shall enter into the
kingdom of heaven, but he who ()
3 ^,violate, transgress, Od. s. 108. II. r. 265.
Od. . 807, regarded with
doeth the will of my Father who is in
heaven." Mat. 7. 21. "Not every one that

,,
, ,,
hatred by the gods. saith unto me Lord, Lord, shall enter into
ouog, o, ij, disposed to offend or the kingdom of heaven, another thing, he
neglect the gods, sinful, II. 157. . who doeth the will of my Father who is in
and ou, liable to offend or —
heaven. He who enters into the kingdom
neglect the gods, offensive, hateful, 13. . of heaven is a different thing from him who

,
,,
157.

/,
criminal deeds.
eihiTYi^tog, ou, criminal, (Ed. C. 371.

iniquity, crime, Agath. 3. Acharn. 907.
,
a pest.
,,
wickedness,

saith unto me Lord, Lord." And this solu-
tion will apply in all instances without ex-
ception.
sertion is
When
a general or negative as-
made,
it is often followed by a

,,
,
'

,
6, vj, perfidious to guests, a

perfidious host, Olym. 10. 8.


sea-worn, Theo. 1.4 5. fr.
, strength in attacking or re-
pelling an assailant, II. . 234. attack, im-
^.
limitation or exception. In these cases
is used, and must be rendered by
BUT, YET, EXCEPT, ON THE CONTRARY, NO,
see Mark 11. 32. Mat. 19. 11} 20. 23.
John 16.20. Pclyb. 4. 29.4.— Further : In

,
petuosity, defence, II. . 42. bulwark, E. enumerating particulars, or in reasoning,
6. 1. 4. —
might, fortitude, II. £. 181. effisi- another thing necessarily means something

,
in might, r. 161.
for or -^,
,
a\x./\u, having put on might, clothed
by sync,
confiding in his might
to be added to the particulars already men-
tioned; and then
MOREOVER, BESIDES, EVEN.
must mean and,
Ill Conveying
and prowess, 36. a~hxv\u<> scil. these senses, other particles are often added,
,, in strength like a spreading flame, such as xxt, ptviu, ov, or
. 154.
,, , the means of defending, bulwark, When
, and aXhx of ,
a writer abruptly passes from one
[). —
F
— — — !

67 08

in his thoughts by ,
subject to another, he marks the transition
as though he
should say, " Enough of this, let us pass to
more it always has the sense
particles,
which it bears when used alone. Thus,
when the poet says that though a king, in

(,
,,
another thing." This is the case when the the day of the offence given him, may stifle
writer is reasoning, commanding, suppli-
cating, or asking a question
. 72. « But come," as if he had said,
; , his resentment, nevertheless
a. 82.) he still holds a grudge— here
has the usual sense of but, and supposes
II.

,
II.
" Enough of this," or, " To say no more, the clause to run thus: Though a king
let us go."
Mark
at all able." In these
9. 22.
and
a. 274.
" But if
similar instances,
u
thou art it, ,
stifles his resentment, he does not extinguish
but cherishes it.
be connected with or
then is to
in the sense
which frequently occur, or its cor- of " certainly," or " at least." In line 1 13
responding bid, might be omitted without Agamemnon asserts that he loved Chryseis
any detriment to the sense, as its sole use as much as he did Clytaemnestra, even
is to mark the transition in the mind of the when she was a virgin ; and presently adds,
,
in view.

,
sentence,
,,
writer, and to summon the reader to follow
him to the object which he has immediately

goes before.
It
, Thus often begins a new
and stands detached from what

may further be observed, that a member


of the sentence in which occurs is
,
" but even thus,"

22, pass,
f.
Att.

,,
he wished
to deliver her up for the safety of the

people nevertheless I wish to give her back.

aor. 2.
f.

I change— change one thing


for another, exchange, barter, give in return,
p. ^-
— hence

, - —
,
often elliptical, and the ellipsis must be
supplied in order to render the sense com-
plete.

,
.
,
Thus
This supposes
24. •» qu-
11.
repay, Alcest. 663.
another, traverse, pass

from one
change one place for

rupt, set aside, Rom. 1 23.



change morals, cor-
.

state to another, alter



change a thing

,
,
the other Greeks hailed the priest, he

, ,
having proved acceptable to them, but he

\ ,
was not acceptable to Atrides. So again
in the next line,

,
The
exchange for myself, E. 4. 1. 15.

changed.
I

,
Heb. 1. 12, they shall be

y, and

,

', ,
Greeks ivelcomcd him, Atrides did not ; on exchange, barter, in-

,
change, alteration

,
the contrary, he ignominiously dismissed tercourse, vicissitude, in

,
him. polo., Me- the intercourse or commerce of life, CEd.
leager, 1. 6. There ere few things of Sap- T. 1 206. ! what a change
pho, another thing, (but) they are roses. , , to be changed—
" Though the pieces of Sappho are not it is necessary to change, must change.

,*
,;
many, nevertheless they are most exquisite

, ,, »* ,,
ov, fitted for exchanging or

] •
/],

,,
and valuable."
a'j ', bartering, commercial, Arist. Ethic. ?. 5.
adv. incessantly, II. 12. see .
»
~r,u ;

,
uf>ww Dem. , ov, another, different, opp. to
316. 17. "With what design did you as- —
the same each, one, opp. to an-
semble them? for peace? But peace sub- other, they ascended
sisted among all ? But for
yourselves were deliberating about peace."
war ? But you

,
each in a different way.
jj, what other than ?
what else?
% -

,
Here the first supposes the question hu does any thing else than nothing
to be answered, No, not for peace, for an-
other thing, peace subsisted among all. The ,
hinder? i. e. nothing hinders, A. 4. 7. 4.
the rest, hence alius.

), ,
oi
second
made, We
supposes the assertion to be
assembled them not for peace,
we assembled them for a different thing,
namely, for war. The third supposes
the reply to be made, You assembled them
not for war, you assembled them for a dif-
ferent thing, for you yourselves were deli-
berating about peace. This mode of solu-
tion shows that the distinctions made by
,
ways,

i. e.
adv. in a different way.
adv. elsewhere in another way.

now here,

another place, elsewhere


now there.

they go one here
and another there, they go in different

, ,, ,?',\. driving
about at different times in different places,

adv. in or to

Lexicographers and those (such as Viger, from another place.


Dupert, and Hoogeveen) who have written , Dor. adv. for in an- ».

on the Greek particles are for the most

.
part erroneous and frivolous in the ex-
treme. When is used with one or
,,,,
other way away, II. a. 120.
,
dual
a. en; one another, mutual,
oiv, from .•;,
— — —

,
69

, ,.
f. ,
I write or interpret writ-

,or pries into the affairs of others, a med-

, ,
ings in a mystic or hidden sense, allegorize, dler, busy-body, 1 Pet. 4. 15.
Gal. 4. 2. fr. f. I think or muse on dif-

,
cation
,
under
a hidden or mystic signifi-

ye Jehovah, Rev. 19. l.

,
,
,
y,
figures of speech, allegory.
indecl. the Heb. praise

mutual union, Long. 36.

mutual
,
, the eating of one an-
'^,
,
,
ferent things, Od. . 374. think otherwise
than what I express, use deceitful language,
Herod. 7. 205. am alienated in mind —
through grief or distress I faint, am deli-

,
rious,

,
Theo. 22. 129.
,
, «j, born of a different tribe.
,
, , using a different tongue.

,
other, devastation, Herod. 3. 25.

,
274.

,
,
slaying each other, Septem, 926.
, q, mutual slaughter, Olym.

born of a different nation.


eo.?,

,
, , using another language.
,
, , known only to others,
,
,
ov t and

adv. in another place,

for
here, some there, II.
some
having a
different colour, of a different complexion,
Hipp. 176.

, 486.
elsewhere, Theo. 9. 6.
.
-
-, ,..
strange, foreign, Od. . 366.

adv. in a different manner, otherwise

,,
, .
alien,
ov, one from another land, an
opp. to
having another form, differently
36.
otherwise than in danger, safely, II. r.

401. otherwise than with deliberation,
rashly, without reason, Hecub. 488.
shaped, changed, Od. v. 1 94.

, ,
,
.
©, «?, using a foreign tongue,
otherwise than true, erroneously, falsely,
Hipp. 198.— otherwise than
,
—,
to good pur-

, ,,
Herod. 3. 1 1
;,
foreign, .

,
pose, fruitlessly, in vain, 303. adv.

, adv. in another place, elsewhere.


adv. from another place.
adv. to another place, in a different
especially, prassertim.

aor.
f.

m.
, for or
I

,, ,
1. f.

part, some to one place, jump, dance, exult bubble or spring up —


some to another.
, ,
as water from a fountain, John 4. 14. aor.
{,
,
1. m. he sprang
adv. Dor. at another time. for or

,, .

,
at one time, one while, to the ground, 29.

,
,
II.

h, at another time, another while, . a leap, a mound, Lye. 319.

,
II.

,
159.

,
,
Jupiter inclines the balance at dif-
'
, ,
,
jumping, Arist. Ethic, x. 4.
apt or fond of jumping, 8. 4. 9.
water, brine, Od. . 53. sal-
b, salt
.

,
ferent times to a different person, one while sugo —
,, , sea, Pyth. 2. 1 47.

pickle. — a,

,, , , , ,
to be rich, another while to have nothing. ov, salt, like
a, ov, different in shape or in tem- the sea-water, bitter, briny, brackish, Od.

),
per, discordant, Dem. 1442. 11.
f. p. I change, vary.

I change, alter myself, am va-


. 511. of the sea, Olym. 7. 105.
t:oqov, the briny ford, an arm of the sea,
M. Supp. 840. bitter tears, Theo.
ried — vitiated, they 23. 24.

,
.,,. , , ,, ,, ,
of themselves changed their sentiments,

Thuc. 2. 59. alienated from reason, i. e.

,
deprived of reason, Polyb. 8. 29. 5.
ov, by transp. strangely
conceived, monstrous, absurd, Philoct.
20. 12.
or
abstract of
thresh, imp.
, of a salt

I
f.
nature, barren

grind), I
for
(from the
pound, bruise,
he beat ths
soil, 0.

,
1191.

,
, , , changing from one to
ground, 11. /. 564.
Polyb. 10. 12. 9.
were crushed,

another, inconstant, scil. Mars, II. . 831.

to &,
a, ov, belonging to another, opp.
not one's own belonging to an- —
other country, strange, foreign— a stranger,
enemy, Heb.

,
11. 34.
belonging to other wives, adulterers,
with hands not his own, un-
,- men
, ,
— inauspicious, E.

a.
are
1
, , threshing, .
ov, having

ov, without speech, mute

3.
no gizzard, without a
3. 4. 15.
with-
out reason, irrational, absurd, Arist. Ethic.

produced from irrational principles,


1 8. 5.

a priv.

all
<•.

liver

things

?,
, ,
skilful, Isthm. 1.19. foreign to the laws of i. e. by chance, or a fortuitous concourse

), ,
God, wicked.
f. I make what is my own
of atoms, Anthol.
rationally, absurdly.
,
2. 278. adv. ir-

belong to another, alienate, estrange—


make what belongs to another belong to

%(«&
myself, appropriate,
w,
.
6.
6. 1. 7.
r,, one who inspect? ,
despise, slight,

:>
rational being,
a:,
f.

, Ion.
I

am
disregard, Herod. 3. 125.

deceived, Polyb.

¥2
-r

'
,
I suffer as an
8. 2. 4.
ir-

-j
,
71 . —— .

, ,

72

-,
,
,disregard, contempt, Herod. 2. 141.
consistency with reason, absurdity.

Ethic,

,
.
ov, inconsiderate, irrational, Arist.
5. — adv. absurdly.
am irrational or mad, Long. 10.
, an aromatic tree called the tree

,
in-

,
soluble,
1.2.18.
or
fr.

,
,
f.

to be mad, or the Arab.


irrefragable, Arist.

,
(from the Heb. 77,
7,
to be as-
tounded or terrified) I am mad, I rave, rave
tvithpain or grief, II. .
12. Od. /. 398. ah~n~
Rhet.

,
, ,
,
of Paradise— the spice or unction of the
aloe,

,,, ,.. ,,
John
,
,
o,
19.
ij,

wrought, purple obtained from a


39.— asort of bitter plant.
without bark, a priv.
, ,
.
literally sea- ,
sea-fish,
sink under anguish, distress,
or perplexity, Orest. 271.— rave with the
passion of joy, anger, or pride, am frantic,
Od. . 332. Septem, 387,
uttering such words in frantic exultation.
f. %, I am mad or furious, said of

., ,
a purple robe,,
ov, unwashed, unclean, Eur. Elect. ravenous dogs, II. 70. .

,
,
1107. ,
, the want of washing, am pierced with anguish, CalL

,,-,, ,, , , , ,
uncleanliness, Orest. 226. a priv. 4. 212.
,
6, , without a crest, a priv. imp. without the aug-
,
6, the partner of a man's bed, a ment, they were confounded or paralysed,
wife —
concubine, aior a bed. Herod. 9. 70.
ov, c. S. -, that which feeds, pass, Att.
from meal, fostering, blooming, I sink under pain or sorrow,

,, Isthm. 5. 15, the most fos- I faint, II. . 94.

§. ,
,

,., , ,
tering flower cf life, the flower which adds distress, anguish, perplexity,
most to the bloom of life. Damm renders Plut. 6. 290.
-, it by and derives it from ,
a river of Peloponnesus, Alpheus.
— —
,.
'
,see c. 1008.
, the sea. into the —
f.

(from the Heb. rf?K) I



,, ,
divine sea, i. e. sea which neither decays
nor diminishes, the great sea, II. a. 140.
from the
6, salt, wit.
sea.

sometimes given it as the means of pre-


It has the epithet §,
search, think, find

earn, produce, II.
receive for wages or obtain as a reward,

,,
79.

Med. 297. incur envy, Arist. Rhet. 2. 21. 2.


or , an ox, {which is one of
the semes that Fptt bears in Hebrew) or a
.


, ,,
,
serving from corruption hospitality, Od.
q. 55. Dem.
400. 6.
a sacred grove, forest, mead,
fr. the Heb. Vil/tt, asal,

being transposed
portion given to a daughter in marriage, as
consisting of oxen, or pieces of money,

<,
Lye. 549.
ov, feeding oxen, fertilizing, M.
-
, , -, ,,
a grove of the muses, i. e. Supp. 868. an epithet of the Nile
a museum or library. woody. was also an epithet given to virgins

,
/?, or a grove sacred to Ju- who from their rank claimed of their suitors

, -, ,
Olym. a large portion as the price of marriage.

,
piter, 10. 55.

02, brackish, Jam. 3. 12.


ov, bitter, 6, a leader, chief, Od. v. 26 J.

, ,
ov, not causing
grief, not trouble- a man that is opulent or noble, Septem, 771.

,,
,
,

— ,
,
not feeling grief.
less troubled, Phil. 2. 28.

,

some or vexatious fierce, violent, K. 5. 3.
less grieved,

adv. without grief or vexation,


I am free from grief, do not sorrow.

,
, freedom from
6, q, not
be grieved,
liable to
grief.
very. So
derived from

2. 7. 6.
,,
I invent,

,,
,
barley-meal,

to invent.

, ^, a baker,

,
.
bread— from
bread being a great disco-
the goddess of corn, is

the baking of bread,

.
.

, ,
unruffled,

, ov,
smooth Trach. 168.
life,
unharmonious, discordant, a ,
,
use barley-bread,
, or —
)
6. 2. 11.
or , —

,
priv. Arist. Rhet. 3. 6. 7. , (from a threshing-
,
,
'

, mount
, a river springing at the foot of
Taurus, Halys.
, , -, , bond, chain, It. 10. 9.
floor, a corn-floor
plantation,
granary, Mat. 3. 1 2.
II.

a corn-field, vineyard,
. 499. Theo. 46.— corn,
—the area of a
1.
circle,

,
,
, ,
ful

5,

f. ,
unprofitable, hurt-
c.
adv. unprofitably,with loss.
I shun, decline, escape, II. . 37 1
I shun, skulk from, II. . 443.
of the harvest.

Septem, 495. a festival in which were of-
fered to Ceres and Bacchus the first fruits

,, ,
an epithet of Ceres, Theo. 7. 155.

, ,
;, , ,
0.
,
h> inextricable fetters, lies.
521. fr. ttzoyi, handcuffs, Anthol. 1. 488.
, avoiding, escape, Agam. 1309.
:', or Theo. 27. 16^ indis-
fox, reynard
•,
6, as if
or waster of the vineyard,

a devourer

a cunning man, Luke 1 3. 32.


rh ov, easily seized or captured,
a
— •

73

,,
,

Thuc. 4. 9. comprehensible,
that which can be easily comprehended,
intelligible, Philoct. 863.
,, ^, ,-,
,, i. e. commit

, -,
fend against, violate, transgress,
AMB
to err human things,
venial faults.
, —
sc.
74

,,
jj, capture, a prey, Thuc. 4. 70.

ov, liable to be seized, QEd. T. ill. ,, — ,



',
,, ,,
together with, with.

,
only— but
once, at the same time,

also.
,
.
and
Amazon, the name of warlike women
Scythia.

, ,,,
,
h, not
2. 1. 2.

at, wood nymphs of equal


age with the trees sacred to them.
-,

,
,,
an
in
,,
,
a
an
sin-offering,

transcribing.

err, Arist.
error, offence, sin, transgression
Lev. 4. 21.
an error of the press, or an error in

y,
Ethic,
or apt to
ov,

.the
sinful principle, or the propensity to sin,
Plut. 7. 767.
prone to
3. ^, sin,
-—

, ,
comp.
unlearned, ignorant, illiterate, rustic, vul-
gar, Orest. 896. a priv. Act. 1. 2. 49.

, , want of skill or knowledge,


ignorance, rusticity, At. 4. 2. 22.
, o, dust, sand, ,, ,
,
sup.

f.
,
. ^,
I
'
false, II. v.

Arist. Ethic,
,
more
eoc, o,
826.

adv. for
.
6,

^,
^^,
. sj, erring in words, vain,

a sinner, Luke 13. 2.


sinful, more widely erring,
9.
at the
-
same time.

,,
,, ,
reduce to ashes, level with the dust,
589. Eum. 935.
II. /.

,
ov, not having
the testimony of others, unattested, un-
ov,

,
ov, large, long, immense, sanctioned by evidence, unapplauded by

monstrous,

,
25. 258.
from

,
II. .
long, Od. f. 311.
179.— invincible, Theo.

, the goat Am althaea, which ,


. witnesses, Here. F. 290. Dem. 372. 6.
adv. without a witness, a priv.

, , and
f. ,
,^, , , -
I shine, Hes. u. 827.

, , ,
issupposed to have given suck to Jupiter. Qvyri, splen-
^,
3. 230.
the horn of Amalthaea,
the symbol of plenty, Anthol. 2. 294. Luc.
dour, brightness, Theo. 23.

Od. o. 250.
f. , I
7.
run with a chariot,

properly applied , made by wheels,

,
n, ov, (for «j, the track
young of animals when yet unco-
to the
02,,a rut, II. -. 422.
— dim, weak

, ,
vered with wool or hair) tender, soft, weak, ov, dark, obscure
. — —mean—
Od. v. 14. 310.
II.

, indistinct track faint or slight

^, &, ,
f. I soften a hard substance disease, from my mind
bymixingitwithwateiyiestroyjleveljl.^.is. darkly foreboding, namely, the fate of Aga-
,
vj, an armful, bundle, sheaf, memnon, Again. 557.
, —
Heb. CD^wS*, alam, *) being transposed.
^, , or
a tier of bundles, sheaf-binder, II. . 553.
,,,. /,' .
, 6, —
f. I render dark

^,
I obscure
extinguish the glory of, Isthm. 4. 82. ef-
face an insult, Dem. 423. 1.

,, ,
,
,,,
,,
stage,Dem.268.13.
waggon,

the
Charles'swain,Il.ff.487.
,,
to be veiled, covered, Persse, 202.
AMAXET02, ov, ov, not

- , , .,
a little wag- to be fought against, invincible, irresistible,

,
gon, a small cart, Nub. 878. Septem, 85. one who has not fought, not
I drive or draw a waggon . — not given to

,
present in battle, 8.

,
4.

f.

drag a weary life, 653.). fight, not litigious, ,


1 .

,
Herod.

, .
waggon,

,
,perviable, passable by high roads,
2.

, ,
108.
a,, ov, , filling a
stones each a
f. ,
or
a battle, without a struggle.
I reap, gather, grasp, Od. .
247. Jam. 5. 4. —
cut off, heap up dust or
adv. without

,
', ,.
^,
259.

fading,

,
waggon-load, A.

, , , ,
52. Heb. "VTD, with a prefixed.

/, , ,
ov, and
1 Pet.
4. 2. 2.
, , a waggon road,
an aqueduct, gutter, II. .
,
a common sewer, cloaca, Theo. 27.

ov, never
1. 3. fr. a priv.
II. . 146.
sand with the hands, pile like corn that is
reaped, Anthol. 1. 254.

Ep. Delect. Eton. 200.

24. 78.

—a
I ascend, for

for
for
optat. thou mayest reap the fruits, profit,

Theo.

, yj, ascent, ladder

,
train of horses ascending, CEd. C. 1025.
—^),
imp.
f.

deviate from the mark aimed at, miss, with


, p.
aor. 2.
I , , for
cends or mounts, Bacch. 1105. a horseman.
one that as-

the gen. . —
1.4. 1 1. deviate from the right ov, capable of being ascended, ac-
path, err, tin —deviate from the laws, of- cessible, II. . 432.
,
— —

75
,,
, , - ,, ,
. . ,
76

, , ,.
, for scil. if this be better, a. 116. or
..
^wct/, I throw up, put off, defer,
^- 436. much better, see

,
, for
imperat. do thou throw up thy voice

,
in singing, sing aloud, Theo. 10. 22.

, ,, -
adv. aloft, loudly, U. 476.
and this for

.
f. I deprive one of his por-
Pyth. 6. 27. a priv.
tion, rob, strip,
, , c.
ligent, unconcerned
Dem. 133. 14. 1211. 7.
, s. neg-
unheeded, neglected, —

,,,
adv. aloft, in squirts, in torrents, adv. negli-
<p« 364. Herod. 4. 181.— at intervals, Nem. gently, carelessly, Thuc. 6. 100.
10. 62.

, , or ,, delay, interval. ,),


to be unconcerned about.
f. ), f. p.

,
01,
lays,

, i.

, e.
f.
Heracl. 271, not after de-
immediately.

weaken, render abortive, hence

,,
and I miscarry, Nubes,
— f. ,«^€», I blunt,

137.
I do not mind,
gent of, governs the genitive. The pass, form
is used sometimes actively,

'
he did not mind such things, a
I neglect, am negli-

vir-
Plut.

, -, ,1. 162.
7, , blunt, obtuse — blunt in mind,

tue is neglected behind by mortals, is neg-
lected as a thing thrown behind, Iphig. A.
.
,
dull, Air. 3. 9. 3. opp. to 1094.— neglect business or duty, omit,

—, , ,,
, ,, , , )
tuse angle.
,
more blunt.

6, },

ov,
and
weak-sighted — dim.
an ob-

, 6, sj
7. 5. 9.
or
ness, heedlessness
. 850, consign these things to oblivion.
,, neglect, remiss-
Iphig.

, ,
Rh.es. 737, in r„ ov, (from a priv.
the night the eyes are dim,
see. a
i.

dim with
e. unable to
tears,
neglected, untrained
(the imper. of
neglectful,
used adver-

1. 19. .

^, ,, , ,
life

,—.
,
, Eum.
i. e. mournful
f.

dim-sighted or blind, Luc. Anal. 9.


,
life,

and
953.
I
-am
bially) but, nay indeed, assuredly,
1. 4. 7, assuredly these

too seem. In Ion. 438, it may be taken in


, but do

,
confusion, blindness.
,
weakness of sight, dimness.
a, op, or ou,
its original sense,
not you mind.
ov, {, not liable to ) x-at

57.
oil.
,
immortal, Antig. 1 148. ambrosial,

,
balmy sleep,
fragrant
. 367, ambrosial food,
food which preserves from corruption, or
II. . 19.
refreshing,
, be censured, irreprehensible, Dem. 300. 17.

, ,,
faultless, complete
or complain, satisfied
without fault or censure, blamelessly.
,

not given to find fault
adv.

irreprehensible, satisfactory,
,,,

,
confers immortality

., , &
thol. 1. 149.

,
divine wisdom, An-

for
v„ food of the gods, ambrosia.

imp. &'&,
thou ,
ample, Persse, 146.
complaint,
fault, Septem, 908. faulty.

,
adv. without
q, freedom from

ov, deprived of life and strength,


,

,, ,
hast missed me, scil. as governing the feeble, vain, unsubstantial,
genitive, II. . 284. I miss in the night, stray, Od. . 521, the vain heads,

,,
i. e.

,
,
.
from

,,, ,
11. S.
6,

441. fr.
night.
6, a mount, top. boss,
an elevated base, high-raised block,

unenviable, odious,
,,,
the shadowy phantoms of the dead.

~,
F. 396.

)
f.

f. ,
,
I
I

with the hand, Theo. 26. 3.— cull, Here.


weaken, II. v. 562.
squeeze, suck out — strip

,,
for Hecub. 193, f. I take away one's portion,
— dispensed without mea-
sad, evil tidings (for deprive of sight, deprive of
sure or envy, abundant — —
a priv. Od. . 399.
furious

, , without method, not


,
vast, battle.

re-
life

for , ,, ,$,
deprive of'one's country, expel, Olym.
1 2. 24. , —
crop, shear, imp.
aor. 1. for he

^
6,

,,
gulated by
, or
Long. rules,
, , a pre-
2. deprived, II. v. 340. Od. . 64. aor. l.pass.

, ,
6, sub. lest thou thyself be

,. .
cious stone or gem, so called from
posed efficacy in keeping

,
amethyst, a priv.

,, , , . -
fierce,

more
II.

ov,
.
, and
,
serviceable,
137.
.
a priv.
off'

better, preferable, braver,


II. y. 11.
ov,
its
drunkenness,
sup-

not mild,

for
deprived,

tude, unanxious,
II.

,
.

for, unheeded, Ajax, 1225. ,


58.
having no care or solici-
6, jj,

1 Cor. 7. 32. uncared

ov, not to be removed, stead-


fast, 1 Cor. 15. 53.
to be immoveable, Arist,
,

/', superior, o. 400, et Ethic, . 68.


,
77

,, ,
,
,-, , .
to be changed,

I

/, not to be regretted—not

2 Cor. 7. 10, repentance not to be repented


of, i. e. rational and effectual repentance.
ou, not repented of, Rom. 2. 5.
—— —

,
-, >,
AMN

,
a contest, combat.
ro,
, a rival—eager.
6, a soldier, who, instead of
riding, led his horse in battle, a foot soldier
who fought mixed with the cavalry, E. 7.
7

,
,
flexible,

2. 4. 50.
ov, not liable to change, in-

,
adv. without turning

, -.
back or looking behind, with precipitation,

,
/, without measure, immense,
innumerable, A. 3. 2. 10.— extravagant
immoderate, extravagantly,
, ,,,
,
5. 23.
tig. 9S5.

equal to a horse in speed, fleet, An*

not odious,
less troublesome, ,
,
^,
, a chamber pot a skiff.
.

It. 8. 9„

, , not having received pay, un-


paid army, Dem. 1 188. 6.— unhired, gratui-
—,
,
2 Cor. 10. 13.

,. ,
nent babbler, II. ,3. 212.
,&,
adv. excessively.
ov, immense, Od. r. 512.

,
6, , one who does not mea-

.
sure his words, an injudicious or imperti- ,
,
tous, Choeph. 731. a priv.
adv. without reward or recompense, gratui-
tously.

Dem.
ov, 6,
865. 20.
, unpaid, unrecompensed,

I surpass, Pyth. 1. 86. h. meo.


ov, 6, % changing my course.
This seems to be an epithet of the tide,
whose reflux brings back what before it ^, , . girl
ov, , , not having a girdle, scil. a
not arrived at maturity, Call. 3. 14. a,

6, having a tunic without

,
. ,,,,\\.
carried away, Pyth. 11. 58. a girdle, or a breastplate without a mitre,

,,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
a spade, bill hook, sickle, mattock.
adv. |ON% most true, be it so.
,
a reaper, II. 67. fr.
ov, , harvest season, II. r. 223.
6, v\, having no mother, or

having a mean mother, Ion. 837.


.
,
'

,,
II. . 419.
,
a knot a noose,
Hipp. 671, for
to untie the knot.

others, unsociable,

disposed to blend with

^, II. . 753. ,
,~
.,
,
an unmotherly mother, e. cruel, and adv. for
,.
i.

S. Elect. 1154. , and together with, promiscu-

, ,, ,
oy, 6, jj, incapable of being
contrived, impracticable

,
ance, distressed, perplexed, destitute,
7. 5. 24. Theo. 1. 85.

wanting contriv-

scil. it

is puzzling, unaccountable, Arist. Ethic. y\.


,
. ^^/,
ously, without distinction, Dem. 531. 5.—
in company with others, amidst others.
for
ov, for
themiddle,between.
, sj, having no por-
tion, destitute, unprotected, II. . 408.
,—
-, ,
3. incomprehensible, vast, Plat. Dial. 120. q, a destitute state, infelicity,
— one
,
, , , , »,.
evaded,

he is
whose machinations
artful, intriguing, II.
adv. in perplexity,
perplexed or unable.
f. jjow, I am in want, am distressed
.
cannot
273.
,
be Od. v. 76. freedom from death, immorta-
lity, Dcm. 86. 23.
ov, , for

parched by the sun sand a place covered
with sand for the purpose of exercise,

properly a place

.
,
, , , ,
or perplexed for the want of, Herod. 1.35.

,
live through want.
,
being at a loss to

, perplexity, embarrassment,
3. 3. 6. from the Heb.
or a title of Jupiter
Amnion, who had a temple in Lydia, so
called from
,
sand.

, )
Od.

, , ,
/.

,
1 Pet. J . 4. (,

,, . ,
,
or
295.— impossibility.
undefilcd with vice, perfect,
ou,

genuine, Arist. Ethic, . 3.


pure water.
,,
unmixed, pure,
and
Ammon.

a male lamb,
,
belonging to Jupiter
vj,

dry sandy seats,


ehgat,
such as those of Jupiter Amnion. Hel. 734.
, a female lamb,
of a lamb,
ov, o,
,, tec

, ,
10.

,

,
ou, unmixed, unsocial, Dcm. 786.
inhospitable, Cycl. 428.
,
,
a lamb-skin cloak, Theo. 24. 61.
ov, ,
a vessel which received the

,- -
,
Ion. the not mixing to- blood of the victim, Od. y. 444.
,
, lamb-bearing, pregnant ewe:
',
gether, the want, of intercourse,
^
,,
/, Herod. 2. 13 G, the want ofcommerce.

\, vj, rivalship, contention, con-


but this reading is suspected,
being supposed the genuine one
flict, combat, battle : properly, a conflict in Theo. 11. 41.
,
7, ,
between soldiers, fr. Obx, a band, b being-
transposed.
f.


I contend, combat,
Time. 6. 31. I strive to outdo another,
rival in attaining, Arist, Ethic, t. 3, ).
forgetful

64. ,
f. ,
6, %
— not remembering a kindness, un-
grateful — unrecorded, undivulged, Phosn.
not remembering,

I forget, pass over in sU


— — —— — —— — .

, ^,
79

,
lence

, , , ,
— am ungrateful, Dem. 320.
,,, /,
forgetfulness, ingratitude, Ion.
Dor.
membrance, inglorious, Theo. 16. 42.
not to be held in re-
24. »-
1 100.
the dead of the night, which Tacitus ren-
ders c in furto noctis/
distended with milk, Hes. s. 588.
, ,
a milk pail.
80

, ,,,,- , ),
f. wu> I forget, forgive, an injury or

a favour, S. Elect. 482.


getfulness of past injuries, amnesty.

adv. without
.
, 6, vt, indefatigable

toil or trouble, ,
, sj, for-

II.
quey,
Apoll. 3. 880.
,
6, jj, blameless, Eum. 472.
ov, a dark man, for

,6, , {,

a lac-
alog, , a female attendant,

shapeless, de-

,, ^, , , ,
,
635. formed, ugly uninformed, uncultivated,
AMOS, , some other, hence
ov, Plut. 6. 602. disguised

,
no other, no one, and their adverbs,
in no
way,byno means ov}ixfAofeit,fcem no place

in tattered clothes, Hec. 240.

,
,
, deformity, ugliness, Orest. 3 9 1
, , having no share, portionless,

, , ,,
also (Aiog, ,
adv. in some way, by some means.

, , ,),
seems originally to have been written
feminine of .
adv. from any place, any where, Od.
a. 10. "It was necessary to begin the Iliad

deprived, Med. 1395.
ov, greedy, insatiable
slaughter, fierce
greedy of
adverbially vehe-
mently, exceedingly, II. \p. 567.
,
, ?, {ex., unacquainted

',

,,,
with the anger of Achilles : but the muse with the Muses, illiterate— unmusical
mightbegin any where in dictating the loose harsh and

, ,
adverbially,

,
story of Ulysses." Yet it seems more na-
tural to derive it from
cially as we read
together, espe-
in Thucyd. 5. 77.
harshly, gruffly, Alcest. 763.
he sings inharmoniously
want of literature or refinement, rusticity.
aht
, the
together, united in a body. The meaning ,
and 6, ), one who ,

, , ,, . , ,.
then would be " at once," and the poet in-

,
vites the Muse to launch without any fur-

,
ther delay on the subject, scil. srsf*
does not labour or toil, At. 2. 1. 33. -not
fatigued
sluggish
— incapable of labouring, indolent,
adv. without trouble,

, ,
f.m. p. I act or give with ease,

, ,
in return— move by turns,

,
change, . 235.

,
supporting one another,
move my self so
.7
II.

as to
to the -motion of another, act my part in

1
.
546.— ex-
leaning upon or
2.
correspond
,'.',
by lot,
, 6, the action of choosing again

reallotment, Olym. 7. 110.

shake, Orest. 322.


for

aor. 2. part,
having brandished.
I vibrate,

,^,,, ,,
unison with, II. a. 604. recompense a fa- I cause to cease, Helen.

vour succeed, Rhesus, 615. correspond — 1351. I rest, repose, Herod.

,,
with,fit, K. 9. 1 4. —
reply to in words move — 2. 95.
— ,
-.
in my turn, pass, II. . 409.

, ',
muheratory
a, ov, in exchange, re-
— alternate, by turns, Theo.
rest — resting, Anthol. 3. 120.
for resting,
^respite,

Herod. 1.181.

,
8. ov, fit

31.
02, and adv. by turns, , for through the sea.

,
,
,&, , ,

,
alternately, mutually, Theo.
,
the action of
giving one thing for another, exchange,

,
bad

^, ,
action,

permutation a return for a good action,
recompense, Od. a. 318. a return for a
punishment.
yj,


ov, 6, , one who recompenses or
1. 35. Il.cr.506.
,
^,, — ',
,,
,,
. 245.—-

,,, .,,
, , ,, ,
vine-dresser,
n, ov,
a vine, II.

a small vine.
of a vine, viny.
vine-producing,
,
Luke
contr.
13. 7.
II. y. 184.
a

, ,, ,
f. I cultivate, dress vines.
succeeds another— adequate. 6, a place

,, —

,
II. /. 467, a grateful requital in return, as planted with vines, a vineyard, 1 Cor. 9. 7.

, ,,
an atonement, Antig. 1067. f. I clothe, cover wrap

,, ,, ,,
and without a por- about, Imp. for clung

, ,
tion, poor, destitute, Theo. 2 1.30. deprived,
Med. 1395.

, f. ,
I milk,
to yield milk, II. . 434.
for
extract
the juice, draw blood, drain, Theo. 25. 103.

',
—pluck, Equit. 326.

about his back, Od. . 225.

\,

,',
,a

,),,,
imp.
I wrap or cover myself, put on.
/imp.

covering, cloak, At. 1.2.5.


, a wrapper, cloak. Theo.15.21.
wander up

,
f. I

7\, , ,
tog, milking, draining, Job 20. 17.
6, the season of milking, - and down (from
Olym. 8. 89. Imp. ,, — miss fail in,

you have

7^,, , ,
II. . 173, in the season in missed, have been deprived of, Alcest. 420.
which a thief would milk the flock, scil. in error, mistake, guilt.
— — — — ——— — — —

,
,,
,
,
81

, ,, ,
, ,
AM 82

, ,
error, sin, guilt, Med. 116. a, ov, fitted to defend or repel.

,,
,
wandering, Trach. 121. sc. defensive arms.
,
, , for respiration, repose.
, repose, respite,Nem.l.l. vi,
a bulwark, Polyb. 1 8. 32. 2.
ov, disposed to avenge, Arise.

,.,
, ,, , ,
ava through labour, Il.y.239. .
shade with ivy— %,
Ethic, 5.
I 6 wound slightly,

,
,
,
or

,
Theo.
, a binder, ribbon,
1. 33.

,,
fillet, a lace cap,
in a
scratch— lacerate, II.

rend fret, II. a. 243.

. 282. tear, mangle,
distract, Persoe. 140.
and

,
rolling cover, Philoct. 688.

, , ,
6, trappings, Septem, 467. 6, scratch, mark, wound, laceration,

reflux of the tide

, ov, or
,

jj,

the almond squeezed from the almond,


— the space
the almond tree, almond.
a, ov, of
, the ebbing or
left by the tide.
,
-, ,
Theo. 24. 124.— rending of the hair, Ajax,
633.

a line
-,
made by
, a mark, weal,
dots, Plut. 2. 721.
, the action of drinking at one
Dem. 1157. 5.

,
,
A. 4. 4. 8.
Apvl)^,aav.together,mhed.ps.a,/aa,lL}c.300.
a, ov, obscure, indistinct, faint light,
Long. 17. Dem. 1370. pen.
breath without closing the lips, a sort of
Bacchanalian ceremony among the Thra-
cians, see Hor. lib. 1. J. 36.
draught or goblet, Rhesus, 419.•
a large

,, —
, ,
,—
6, sj, uninitiated, Arist. Rhet.3.2.

,,
adv. at one draught, Anaer. 21,

,
,10
one unexperienced
he laughs not like
profane, , . f. drink at one draught, drink greedily.
(preposition governing the genitive,

,
,
.
,
ov, free from

numbered,
ov,

vast,
fiction, Plut. 6. 56.
not to be expressed, not to be
Dem. 49. ult.
dative and accusative, and in each having
nearly the same sense,) about about, i. e.
concerning, in respect of.
, , ,,-
,
ov, free from lowing, scil. a fold about love, Od. S. 267.
without cattle, empty, Antip. Sid. 94. a, concerning virtue around

, -
.

, ,
, Priam, II. 146. . 108. about, ows^fcr,
,—
a city of Laconia.
al, on account of, for the sake of.
sv, belong- ,,for the fountain, II. 825. .
,^,
a, ov
ing to or of Amy else, a citizen of Amyclee for the oxen, II. o. 587. about, over, upon.

, ,,
adv. from Amy else, over his shoulders, II. y. 328.
I imitate, or use the dialect of, the Amy-
,
— on the fire about proximity.

,claeans, Theo.
,
12. 13.
a sort of shoes, Theo. 10. 35.
,
«j, (fr. a priv. a cake made ,)
,

,,
near, towards, at.
or about Corinth,
road, by the side or near the road,
near
about the

,,
of corn unground but soaked in water,
Theo. 9. 21.
6, , (another form of , towards, near, evening,

,
town, throughout the town, II.
5. 4. 16.
about the town, all over the
705. .
.

,
i'r. a
spotless
priv. and the Heb. tDlD, mum, a spot,)
—blameless,
of collusion with Achilles,
lent, noble.
, aor., i. e. unjustly suspected
II. a. 92.


opu- —
I am
whole time,

-,
,
Olym. 2. 55. about, i. e. em-
bracing, the whole time, throughout the
through-
out, «!>#, in, during, the remainder of life.
through the sand, over or

, \
f.

,faithful to another,

, (Heb. \0&, amun,) I de- along the sand or shore, Ajax, 1083.

,
,

, , - -, ,
fend, succour ward oiF, repel, aor. 1. In composition, or retains the
without the augm. Imperat. sense of about, near, on both sides, on all

,
456. .
avert, with the dat.
129. Inf.
and accus. II. a. sides, altogether.
f. I throw , my arms

alone, f. 362.
and gen. II.
3 plur.
Herod.
,,
402. f.

9. 6.
ion. . .
to avert, to succour, zvith the dat.

,
avert from, with the accus.
.
they will bring assistance,

. I

am faithful to
, ,
. round a person, ardently embrace,

semble round,

,
a, ov, and
manifest, undisguised,
aor. 2.
15. a.

',
37.
y, ov,
II.

sc.
. 192.

,
I as-

open,

,,
,myself, avenge, 11.3. exert myself II. m. 169. openly, or in a public manner
.
,
in averting or defending, repel, Od. 62. explicit, professed and

, ,, ,
,

-, , ,
,
vj, the repelling an insult, defence. adverbially, in an open manner, manifestly,
a, ov, must be encountered, Lysis. for ava, or plainly, Antip.
661. it is necessary to defend or Sid. 45.
avenge, . 8. 6. 3. , Ion. , , hesitation
,, and , a de- of speech, inability to speak, II. q. 695.
fender, avenger, Orest. 1588. Antip. Sid. 61. f. I rush on
G
— — — —

,
both

-%, ,
-, . ,
83

Sides,
sides -float
II.

ring around,
. 417.
. 408.
II.
).
about — attack
I
on

rattle about,
all A «4?)/'e/o;,livingiri both elements, amphibious.
(

ov,
lebrated, Anthol. 2. 6.
ov, 6,
, , cried

q,
up on all sides,

divided between two


,
84

ce-

,, ,
f. ,, I sound, ring so as to be counsels, Call. 4. 303. doubtful,
/\.
-&, ,
heard all around, II. ,. 160.

.
Eum. 736.

-,
,-, ,,
f. I feel about with the
: foot in verse,having one short

,
hands, handle on every side, Od. . 27 7. between two long syllables.
f.

f.

around, Androm. 426.


rolled about, Here. F. 399.
,-,
,,
I drive about, Od. . 9.
I wind or throw the arms

^, ,,
i, q, ,
covering a man on every
y,

the whole body, II. ,6. 388.


f. ,,
ov,

side, an epithet of a shield as protecting

1 cast about in thought,


;,
,; and imp. or I doubt, A. 2. 5. 8. being

,
,
without the augm. I follow round,
surround, II. 804.

,,, .
envelop, . 348. —
,doubted, i. e. not thoroughly known, E. 6.

,, ,
5. 26.

497.
surround with honours, invest, ao.

or

perf. pass,
,,
I shut about, inclose.

and
for
this for .(>,,
Ion. by
3. plur.

(>.
,
,,
ov,
to both ends, iron-spiked,
p. m.
blaze about, II. . 329.
^,
lame in both
having a piece of iron annexed
II. v.

I
feet. yvy.

147.
kindle around,

, ,
substituting a for v, 481.
invest, II. sr. ua, , thick on both sides, very

,-, , , -eva, f. «yo:^, I burn around, Od. /. 389.


having an edge on both ,, ,
hairy, said of Jupiter's segis.
oi, tied around, fetters for the

,
sides, doubly edged, II. ,. 256. /.. feet, garters, Herod. 2. 69. fca.

. , ,
covered or enveloped on i. e. equally expert
ov, 6, q, right,

,all sides, unseen, II. a. 45.

-,
-
rowed on both sides, swift-rowed
boat, Cycl. 15.

. , < ,

evenly built, Ion. 1128.
ov, with two oars on each side, a
with both hands, Arist. Ethic, s. 7. both
hands, (Ed. T. 1260.— ambiguous, Herod.
5. 92
;
, ov, second, Olym. 1. 80.

, .&,,
-,
11.

, ,
,
swift-rowed boat, Thud. 4. 67.
ov, liable to be disputed, doubtful,

. 382. Polyb. 5. 85. 6.


.
the most deli-
cate or sumptuous dishes on the table. Ivo.
for

, , Od. a. 401. closely contested,

-
ov, 6, sea-girt, ov, 6, ij,
or I fasten around, doubtful, Thuc. 4. 1 34.
Hipp. 770.
£%, /, f. yoo), I whirl, roll about,

,, % ,
p. m. I cry so as to be is encircled, Od. . 405. oivyi.
heard around, shriek aloud, II. . 316. I watch a person while
,/, f.

- ,, . -
, ,,
, going about, chase, Bion.
,^,
, f. jjara aor. 2. 6.

,&? ,;, , ,,,,


2. I walk about, go round as a dubious,
ov, I am un-

,
guard, protect, II. a. 37. surround, certain in opinion, waver,

,
to
/,
.
having fallen upon, K. 10. 13. uncertainty, Arist. Rhet. 1. 2. 4.

,, ,
q, dispute, debate, Herod. ov, measuring a hand-breadth,
.

,
4. 14. filling the hand, 4. 4.
encompassing, II. s. 628.
sag,
f. by sync,
— ,,
tearing both cheeks through
sorrow, deeply mourning, U./3.700. &.
,
aor. 2. f. throw; on both sides, II. 393.
scatter round, put on both sides, II. s. 722. , , having an entrance on

,
,,
ov,
— —

,
put round a garment, wrap with put the both sides, a house or harbour, Apoll. 1.940.
arms around, embrace dispute, litigate, — propelled, rolled, rowed

,
,
y, ov,

,%&, ,, ,
Polyb. 20. 10. 2.

,^,
on both sides, II. v. 174. hence
, put

,
thrown around, wrapped round, Andr.426.
ov, or f.
— I
,

,
about, Helen. 1085. ov, to, f. p.
a thing thrown on each side, a large fishing I put on, clothe, Mat. 6. 30.—

&,
, ,,
net, Mat. 4. 18.

, £, , ,
distracted
teeth, or with flukes on each side.

biguity. c-uT : %o
,

a rampart, Iphig. T. 96.
ov, cast around, smitten on every
side, Septem, 285.

'/],

doubtful, ambiguous
anchors with two

Ion.
'/; /, r g,
t

held in doubt,
, am-
I clothe myself, am arrayed.
imp.
cover, remain upon, II. . 25.

rounded by the sea.


,
I rest upon,

ov, 6, q, near the sea, sur-


Olym. 7. 59.
flourishing all around, happy
in every respect, II. 496. .
blooming or —
distracted with a double calamity, Herod. full-grown youth, Pint. 1. 254.— abounding
with ills, Agam. 1153.
—— —

,
85

, ,
,• ,,,
,:,
f. mo, aor. 1 . pass, I put I wipe all about, clean, rub with a sponge,
86

,
around the head, II. . 257. Od. v. 152.

,
being put on so a? to cover, 271. or near, 11.^.461.
I fight about,

, , \, capable of being laid on either


,,,., awe*,, black all around,Il. x. 103.

,, , \,\ bellow round, Od. ^.227.


end, said of a cup with a double bottom,

.
ii. -. 2i 7. ov, disputed,

,
I run about, frisk, Od. contested, Trach. 104.

,
f.

,
. 413. I dwell about or in, U. . 186.

, ,

,
ov, whetted on f. I peel around, polish, II. -.

,
both sides, double-edged, Aniig. 1315. §r,ycj. 196.

. ,, ,,,
having a double door, or
an entrance on both sides, Theo. 1 4. 42.

-),
by plains, Pyth.
ov, scil.
9. 94.
a hill

Iamabout,circulate,Od.#.352.
encompassed

-,
f. &>, I cover on both sides I employmyself about,II. .28.
—render

,
,. , ,
invisible, i. e. erase, Hecub. 908. I echo round with la-
— veil, II. s.

,
68. mentation, Call, in Del. 179. rsim,

, , I cleave into two parts f. wet, I turn round about,

drive here and there, II. . 348.


, -.
-, .
peel around, Od. . 12.

,, , . ,
I lie about, border upon. f. I squeeze about, aor. 1.

-, , washed on both sides, grasped, Theo. Ep. 6.

, ,. , . thickly covered upon


with aor. 2.

-
I fall

,
6,

hair or leaves, II. q. 677. hairy, leafy, the neck of a person, embrace, Od. 9. 523.
or ov, double-head- , entwining round,

, , ',
,,-,
I
,, -,
ed, many-headed, Here. F. 1274.

,
£oc,hangingfromboth shoulders.

hang about, invest, Isthm. 2. 64.


•'.,
Sil. 29.
viyog,
f. £<y, I interweave, entwine, Paul.

cv, beaten on
every side, dashing around, Philoct. 688.

,
a council consisting of dele- —
beating on both sides, said of a
gates representing the several States of hammer or mallet, Leon. Tar. 4.
Greece. They assembled at Pyla3, and were ,
adj. turning round, circular,
,

,
hence called Pylagorce. accessible on every side, Olym. 1. 149.

,^, , ,,,
,
9j,

',
the council of the Amphictyons— its pre-

, ^, \, ov, of the Am- 91.— a


a female attendant, Theo. 24.

-
rogative. lacquey, Plut. 5. 254.

,
phictyons, Dem. 331. ult. and I turn
f. ,
I roll about, tumble over.

for having Herod. 2. 56.


f.

round, frequent, Theo. 1. 124. wait upon, —

,
caused him to fall on his sword, Nem. 8. 40.
,/^, ov, scil. 5sir«i, a cup, one end to, flew
I fry about. Imp.

or fluttered about,
,
II. . 315.

,
of which serves as a bottom to the other, having two faces, scil.
a dcuble-cupped phial, II. x. 584. Janus.
,,,, , .
,
that which can be received having a gate on each side, or a

,
,
only with both hands, ample, Herod. 3. 1 14. double entrance, Med. 134.
— — — spreading
capacious, Call. 2. 42. wide-spreading
,', blazing round fire all

,
flames, Long. 12. 4. adv. around, Ion. 212. -vo.

, ,- ,
vastly, Plut. 5. 575. r„ ov, sea-girt, Od. x. 50.
, , , gibbous, said of the moon. on both
adv. sides — with both hands,

,,, ,
I

f.
weed,
*, I
din; about,
dispute, doubt.
11. a. 241.
,
II. . 161.— apart.
about — without, Herod.
It is sometimes used for

/-., 1. 85.

,
811.

^,,,,
,,
verted,

<, &,
Phcen.
Med. 637.Thuc.5.

,
", adv. doubtfully,
503.
79.

without controversy, Septem,


doubtful, contro-
uncertain, litigious,

equivocally. ~
I float,

or thing
another,
Herod.
f.
shake about.

— claim
9.
Dem.
74.
I
wave in the wind, Anthol. 1. 504.
,,
I dispute about a person

as a right in opposition to
165. 11. — debate— differ,

,
oracles that are ambiguous. xc, sue, , dispute,
having two plumes or crests. litigation, debate, pleading, Arist. Rhet. 1.

Antig. 351, the yoke


raised at both ends, double-crested yoke.
n, ov, between the light of the
sun and the dark, twilight grey night, II.
/). 48S» fr. 7^the sun. hence lucco, lux.

-,
13. 10.
cdii(7 /(7?>?-)7ai' £4cc,liabletobedisputed ;

Time.
\-.,\
1

6. 6.
l

stand around, imp.



ov, controverted, debateable,
Dem.87.

:?&6,
', f.
}
aor. 1 . . »(» surrounded or stood in the circle,
G2
11. . 712.
,
87

, , ,
, , AM

AN

88

,
&, aor.

,
one of two
l.m. and thus from
-
^,
f. differs
I put round, I clothe myself, Theo. 2. 74. — adv. from both sides,

-,
A^/s-o^o^havingtwomouths, doubly edged.
imp. for — TYig o%v, on both sides of the
adv. on both sides, in
way
both

, ,
they waged war about, be- cases—

^, -. adv. to both sides.


,

,
sieged, Ii. A. 712. a freightage, or
, , twisted —having folds or
6, jj,

money paid for the use of a vessel to a

,
, ,
spires as a serpent,

,
out on both sides

»,.
aor.

one's neck, Orest. 1042.


,
1

surrounding the
. pass,
Ii. . 40. ^.
— throw the arms around
I stretch

walls,
place, and its return again to the same port,
Dem. 908. 20.
, hurled with both hands.
, and
faultless (fr. a,
6,

and the Heb.



,
mum, a
.
ilDlO,
spotless,

, ,
around the ramparts, Sepiem, 290. spot), blameless, Long. 33. entire, 11.

aor. 2. . put 1 109.—, without blame, Herod.


round, girt, Od. . 481. \mt fetters upon, 82.
3.
,
,, ,
Dem. 422. uit. ou, having two ears or handles,

,,, ,,
I cut on both sides,hack around.
ov, cut around, double-edged,
an ear — said of a goblet, Od. .
,
at, two ears, one on each side.
10.

,,, , -
Hipp. 1375. AN, a conditional particle from yu resolved
f. I tremble ,, into

,which by excluding becomes av,
— —
all over,Od.B. 820.— shake, quiver, II. 507.

bored on each
ov, and
side, perforated, oV
, .
adj.
|
if may, might would,should can, could
— must.
This particle is used with all the moods ex-

, -
, ,
-QVjTog Philoct. 16, through the den cept the imperative, and with every tense,
having an opening on both sides, though less commonly with the present and
, through this ca-
scil. future indicative. The following remarks
may serve to illustrate its meaning, ,
verned rock, Cycl, 703.
, , the edge of the land worn , be-

,
ing an abbreviation of the primary
by the sea, a beach, a sea-goddess, i. e. a
poetic name for the sea, so called from its
sense
,,
is if; ,, as
you weep, and if you do
, for

\,
if

',
,
,
,
-
wearing out the land,

,
aor. 2.

, ,
spread around, Pyth. 3. 70.

,, ,
Theo. 21. 55.
I run about,

, husband of Alcmene, and


reputed father of Hercules
, , son of Amphitryon.
ov, having a goad to strike at
both ends, double-pointed. Call. 1.1.
, ,, double-crested —
not.— 2.
if in

or should,

Dem.
When
expresses the conditional,
the preceding clause, otv is introduced
in that which follows in the sense of would

40, if any of those things said by these


orators satisfied me, I would have main-
qyov ,
-

, ,
scil. tained silence ; but if not, then I too would
a helmet with two prominent parts, one have attempted to express what I think.
to cover the forehead, the other the neck, 3. Though av necessarily implies condition,
II. e. 743. and is hypothetical, it is often intended to
,
visible to all, Andr. 834.
— convey a positive or absolute sense. Thus
aor. 2. ;^, as it may appear to me, is

„, ,
I open the jaws on both sides, i. e. gape

-
widely, Antig. 117. —
devour, II. y. 79.
— ,;, — ing for ,—
but a modest or unassuming way of speak-
, while he

,, ), , f. f. may live, for while he lives 6v


f. I pour around, spread over, Od. Mat. 26. 48, whom I may kiss, for whom I
S. 278. shed fragrance around, II. 41. . shall kiss— Anacr. 9, hav-
r^,oz/,spread,heapedaiOund, Il.y. 145. ing drunk I may dance, for I dance. 4. av —

-,,'' ,
ou, gilded over, Hee. 541. is often repeated with the same verb to

,-
\ , lame

,
in both feet, to render the condition or contingency the
,
, — &, — of Vulcan. more prominent or emphatic.
§,
, ,, . 1438, would have

,, , .
, (Ed. I
a placewheretwowaysmeet across street. done it, be assured, would. \,
I
or ^,,or ', , a large
earthen vessel with two handles, hence am-
,, ),
703, I cannot save you, perhaps as you
, Orest.
But

-
phora, a small cask', think, by main force, that I cannot.

,:,,
gen. and dat. ^ip&F^both, together.
hence ambo.
ct, ov, both.

in the plural;
It is generally used
and means two collectively. j
ferent meanings,
,
when av is repeated, it may take two dif-
,
Orest. 373, so that I should
not know him if haying seen him.
— —— —

ANA ANA
so

~ ,- ,
mouth being the medium, II. . 250. ava
90

, ,,
Thuc. through strength, by force, force
6. 18, be assured that the base, the middle,
and the correct, if mixed together, would
being the means ava
mind, in the mind, II.
3,
through the
.
86.— up, upon,
mostly prevail.— 5. Though av with a par-
),
on. ava up the river, ava

, \
ticiple often takes the primary sense of if, on the sceptre, ava on, or
its 'general effect is to impart to a past par- in, ships, ava II. . 152, on
a future conditional sense. But this
ticiple the top of Gargarus. ava '
,,

\, , ,
-, ^[, ,
is owing to an ellipsis, it being necessary to
repeat the preceding verb to render the
sentence complete. Thus h

,, how
become really wise in things about to profit
can a man
came up
for Iphig.

means a part, separately, each,


.
1059, a troop
with spears or spikes of fir-tree.
ava is often used adverbially, and then

,,
each or singly received a penny, Mat. 20.
9. ava ava
ava
Inva^tov, they a part received a penny, they

Mark
him? It is plain, my son, he answers, that 6. 40, in ranks a hundred each and fifty
whatever things it is lawful to know after each, ava
having learnt them, hebecomes thus wise by . they marched a part five para-

,
4. 6. 4,

, ,
learning them; literally, having learnt sangs in the day, i. e. they marched five

them he would, i. e. he would become each day.


wise,
In the sentence following this, av, con-
nected with the present participles
. 2. 6. 19.
.
- ,-,,, &, In composition ava has the sense of back,
again, up, re,
Ava, for
and is opposed to
Up, for rise up.

and may be construed f. aor.
if learning, if mindful of. And here it may 2. ascend, mount— grow up, Mat.
be laid down as a rule invariably true, that 13. 7. pervade, Od. . 29. —
cause to ascend
av with a participle is equivalent to that or mount —
I swell as a r'wer— return home,

. ,
,, .. , ,
participle changed to the optative with the

,, ,,
implied subject in the nominative case. Thus
in the instances above,
same import with
with xv
and ecu with
,., bears the

with
Polyb. 10. 4. 6.
ava^ah-fiv, adv. upwards, Plut. 7. 392.

cent —
, or
steps, ladder.
, an as-

ac, v\, a little bridge reaching


from a ship to the land, a plank a ladder,
,

,,
,,
Thus also in Demosthenes, p. 40. 2. Luc. 1. 371.
means av, I wouldhave restrain-
-
or ,,
ascent expe- —
ed myself. 6. When — or occurs in
,, ,
dition, A. 1.4. 9.

,
the following clause, av

,, ,,, ,
the preceding one, see
often omitted in
is

II. .
698, where
, a horseman, Polyb. 21. 12. 9.
f. ), I cause to ascend or

,
thov is for av, would have captured. mount, put on horseback or on board, ava-

.
-
for ,, they would you must compel the
have been ashamed, iEschin.c.Ctesiph. § 5. horsemen, l. 2. — forceon the stage,

,,,
Finally, av often coalesces with ore, make public, Polyb. 11. 6. 8.

same manner
ANA
into,

as
and in this
state modifies the succeeding verb in the
when
combined

separately used.
or av, preposition, governing the ac-
cusative, and in the poets, the dative. This

£-, ,
, .
tcii, Att. for
I mount, embark.
will raise up,
cause to mount, Dem. 440. 18. — bring up

,
toacourt ofjustice,prosecute,Plat.Dial.62.
f. rage with Bacchus,
revel in blood, Here. F. 1086.^oA/j/,sc.
preposition signifies medium or interval of aya'oa5i^/f'«,f.iyff6;,Irenderfunous,Orest.338.
time or place, answering to the Latin per,
-, lift up, carry away,

,
f.

,
through, throughout, along, ava
throughout the army, II. . 209.
through the night, in the night, or
^/,
bring back.

ava AvxQa7\.'ho), f.
put, up

,
aor. 2.

I throw,
throw up the ground, raise a heap,
?>.,

,
by night, |.80. ava through- heap up— put on horseback, help to mount
out the war, during the war ava —
throw back as a horse doe/ its rider by
through the middle, in the midst, between, rearing, 8. 7. .
throw back my cloak —
-
nately, 14. 27.
Latin re, -
during, Mat. 1 3. 25. 1 Cor. 6. 5.
, —
ava
ava

,
through part, in part, by turns, alter-
back, answering to the
II. . 546,

they turned back to the furrows in, by,


ava ',-, throughtthe mouth, in the mouth,
over the shoulders, as the Cynics did, AnthoL
3. 172. see Dem. 420. 20.
I put myself up to do a thing,
prepare, take in hand, begin, Od. a. 155.
— —
throw the time back for myself, defer,
put oflj omit, Nem. 7. 114. aor. 2. m. -
91

,,
, ANA
put off the examination, remanded
to another time, Acts 24. 22. impede, re-
tard,
vva&hwig,
Dem.
,&,
,
102. 27.
the deferring, delay,il./3.380.

, ,
, ,

very, recognition, A. P. 21. 34.


,


yj,

compulsion — aprinciple that forces or com-


ANA

Dor.
'
, disco-

necessity,

S2


,
or ,q, any thing thrown
up, a mound, rampart —delay, Here. F. 93.
pels, custom or obligation, Luke 23. 17. a

law of nature instinct, natural affection
— ,
,
,, ,
%7,
,, , , ,
cent, Polyb. 12. 30. 5.

,-,
f.

impediment prelude, exordium, Arist.
Rhet. 3. 9. 6. Pyth. 1. 7.— clothing— as-


return to life, revive.
I
optat.
,

-,,
distress, violence,
there is

f.
necessity,

to act by powerful motives, Luke 14. 23.


to be compelled, Thuc. 7. 13.
I force,
poverty,
it is necessary.
compel —induce
sc.

,",
I look up or upon, open
f. it is necessary to compel, must
my eyes so as to see distinctly recover — force adv. forcibly, by com-

-, , ,
my sight, Mat. 20. 34.

,, , ,
pulsion, opp. to 1 Pet. 5. 2.

, ,

gfi^the recoveryofsight,Luke4. 1 9.

.
the action of looking
back as dogs do to their master, K. 4. 4.

.
cause , , «;yi4yxois-i^of,)7,o^,compulsive,Arist.Ethic.x.9.

which
a, ov, C.
binding or obligatory as dictated
is

by nature, custom, or law) necessary, in-



s. (that

,
,,
,
to bubble up,

,,
363. I bubble up, spout,
gush out, overflow, Theo. 17. 18. Ion. ava-

, - , abounded, Apoll. 3. 223.

exclaim, aor. 1. part,

,
for
f.

,,,
I raise up my voice,
evitable violent, critical, Polyb. 2. 60.
compulsion, slavery, Ajax,
486. Persons are said to be when
united by consanguinity, or when subjects
of compulsion, as captives or slaves. Hence

,
.

,,
, /, ,,
,, for
having shouted, Herod. 1. 8. xi/s€a<re3
she shrieked, Herod. 1. 10. compulsion, slavery,
II. 836, the day of
un-
.

,
, &,
II. ,
,
,
,
,
Dor.
I
asbees,Theo.3. 1 3.

make
rushing out in a torrent, roar,

,'.,,
. 240.
f. ,
beardless, Theo. 5.S7.
a noise like water

re-absorb, swallow again,


II. r.
when
IS.
avoidable fortune, bondage,
.
of
4. 1. 9, things necessary, the necessaries
life, ,
necessity, II. - 85.
adv. necessarily, of necessity.
it is necessary.

compel to swallow, Long. 31.

,
,

, ,

^, , ,
f.

with noise, spring forth,


p. I gush out untie, Gd. .348.

-
II. . 54. ov, impure, ac, impurity.
,
oj, the action of turning up f. I announce, nominate.

, ,
the ploughing, Pyth. 4. 406. to be called, or surnamed,
soil,

,
,
aor. 1. I bring K. 14. proclaiming.

,
f. 1. ',},


,
back a message or information reveal, f. \j/a, aor. 1. in.

,
,
,
.
,
teach, John 16. 13. Prom. 661.

aor. 1.

,
,
f.

5. 1. 5.
I laugh again, 2. 4. 45.
they loudly laughed,

f. , I regenerate,
transform From ignorance and vice to know-

,
renovate,
cord,
lustration,
scription —
—inscribe on a
1 register
.
Long.

, ,
recorded, Thuc.
— transcribe, copy

,a
3.

record.
11.
,,
register,

inscribed,
6,
1
1

.
3.

registered,
181.
pillar
for
re-
il-

in-

,
., ,
^,!>.) , ,
ledge and virtue, 1 Pet. 1. 3. John 3. 3.

, , , -
2 Cor. 5. 1 7.
f. I taste thoroughly, relish
critically, Nubes, 523.

i.

, ,
— aor. 2.

I know
for hunting,


f.
I
imp.
I lead, bring up
lead back, bring home, Od.
q, no hunting, a season
priv.
mutter, grumble, Nubes, 942.
aor. 2.
raise up, Ajax, 131.
272. re-

. 5. 3.

. —
unfit

, ,
again,
perusing

,
renew
it again
cover, Theo. 24. 23.
Herod. 1. 87; 6. 83.
read
my knowledge of a thing by

recognise, clis-
instigate, persuade,—

treat,

withdraw, Mat. 4. 1.
lead away lead to execidion.
brought up for trial bring up sacrifice,

was

,
for offer bring on board, cause to embark, 11.

,, ,^, ,
might read Theo. 18. 43. a. 310. —
raise up or restore the soid, An-

,
it,

££.•;, , and , thol. 2. 442. I am led up


reading, Acts 13. 15. inquiry, scrutiny— re-
,,
raise, weigh anchor, withdraw to the deep,

,
.
cognition, or the knowing a person again,
Herod. 1. 118.
,
reading, Arist. Rhet. 3. 12.
f. ,
,
disposed to or fond of

recover my knowledge of
a person or thing, recognise, Acts 7. 13.
,
,,
opp. to Polyb. 1.21.4.
to be referred, to belong, Arist. Rhet. 1 4. 3.
departure, setting sail,
,
6, , not reduced
;
1.6.20.
order, un-
disciplined, refractory, Air. 3. 3. 4. ineie-
irant, Long. 34.
.
.
— —

, , ,
.

93 ANA ANA i)4

, -,
gaged in

,
unsignalised,
. ),
, one who has not been en-
a combat or battle, Thuc. 4. 92.
opp. to a priv.
dowed,
,'. ,
,,
II. /. 145.
imp.
y,
a
,
without a dowry, unen-
priv. '.
I lift up— carry
),
, , ,,
away the prize of victory, 11. \L•. 778.

, ,
^,,
f.

I divide, distribute,
,
f.

Thuc.
division, distribution,
3. 52.''
Dem. —
715.
, I live
f.

evaporate, Long. 44.


again, revive,
I boil out,
Rom.
bubble up, Trach.
4. 9.

215. 24. i. —

-, ,
\.*., — ~.),\\. ava- —

,
I prepare for a journey, pack up break
, —
,}>, f. hold up to the light, exhibit,
I
show, proclaim appoint to an ojjice open

,
a gate, S. Elect. 1473.

up a camp, leave a station convey away,
Herod. 8.

\,
60.

,
packing up.

,
,
,
, ,
priv.

.
^,
,,, exhibition

.,,
6,
2. 3. 4.
— appointment.
without a brother, a

the engrafting of trees.


plantations or shady walks,
Dem. 1251. 23. ava,
^,
, ,
seek again, inquire dili-
f.

gently, examine accurately, Acts 11. 25.

,,
I

describe, paint, Long. 32. 5.

tuck up a long garment and thus prepare


for action, gird, having girt
— ,, f. I

,
our own loins, 1 Pet. 1.13.

,
aor. 2. look up, see
distinctly, II. g. 436.
f. ma or ,—
I bind, tie up— lash
f.

flame, rekindle, 2 Tim.


,
,,
I blow up sparks into a

1 . 6. /--
,
one ship to another bind luith a crown, rendered fiery bybeing spurred, 0.1 6. .1
— warm again,

,
adorn, crown, Thuc. 3. 288. I bind up for imp.

,
myself, subjugate, Plut. 7. 257. Polyb. 1.
28. 7. avslwoi», they attached, referred,
Herod. 2. 143.
bundled up, Thuc. 7. 25.
having tied or

^,, ,
^,
, ,
Anacr. 3.
f.

green, flourish again,


—- @7\,
II.

f.
«. 236.
,,
f.

I
\, I grow
take fresh

,,
/,
,, ,,
,

, or
crnament a fillet, ribbon.
6, a head-

ou, bound up, tied back, Hecub. 923.

a prize of victory, 2. 5. 91.


f.
,
a crown tied to the head,

1 take back, receive

take on my back, carry take up a friend, —


courage,

hopes,
Avadspca,
.
am

,
5. 4. 11.
reanimated, Thuc.
f. vvco,

ro, that which is set apart


for holy purposes, a victim.

-, (rather
Rom. 9. 1, I too (i. e. J too as well
I embolden, give fresh

,)
5. 82.

entertain, Acts 28. 7. —


take up a btisiness, as Peter) would have gloried in being se-

, ,
undertake, promise, II. s. 619. take upon parated, i. e. appointed by Christ, for con-
me the payment of another' s debt, engage as

,,
,
a bail, Theophr. Char. 12.
,cessation, Trach. 825.
f.


,
bail.
I teach again, teach more
1


verting my brethren, and to be sacrificed
as a victim in their cause a curse a per-
son separated, as being under a curse, ex-
communicated,
,—1 Cor. 12.

3. . —

,,
perfectly

*~, ,
a,
assure fully,
suade, Herod. 8. 63.

&, priv. linn.


ov,

f.
"
Thuc. 2. 312. per-

fly back or away, Polyb. 29. 7. 1


unadjudged, void, Dem. 760.

I double, .
^, ,7. 5. 3.

,
,
excommunicate

, ,—
a temple, offering
^,. ,
f.

in case of having toldafalsehood,Markl4.7i.


separate from society,
I
subject myself to a curse

that which is put up in

ornament, Thuc. 2. 13.

I give —
up give up fruit, yield, produce
give up a letter, deliver, Acts 23. 33. re-
store —
give up a flame, emit
or

give up a


f.

,
^, ,
, ,^),
plate,
,)>, ,
-,
, —
f. I view through, contem-
examine, inspect, Acts 17. 23.
•„ contemplation, Plut. 1.205.
f. 1 squeeze, press up.

,
sound, utter —
distribute commune pro- — aor. 2. by ex-

,pose for deliberation, Polyb. 5. 58. 2. give

,, ,,
up, sink, fall away, Arist. Rhet. 2. 15. 3.
given back, restored, Thuc. 3. 52.
I run or shoot up as

,—
,
— cluding
f.

I
I
£,

spring up,
spring

,
11. v.

f.
up
Apoll.

140.
— rebound,
I make an
3. 555.—

uproar, ap-

,, , .
a tree growing, Herod. 7. 156. run back, plaud loudly, A.

,
5. 1. 3.
return with speed, withdraw, Thuc. 3. 88. , any thing reared up, a
^\,\>.\.
,
,
— f.

I spring up,
has shot up, Od. . 413.

avoid, shrink from, 2. 5. 2.


, v>,

emerge —

emerging, disengaging from.


aor. 2.
I
,
grown up cub, Theo.
f. wos,
narrowly, Hecub. 808. Thuc. 4. 87.
I

imp. avrk>v,•, I burst forth, gush up,


Call, in Cer. 27.
23. 19. ava,
look through, examine
,
,^, , ,
95

less,
eager,
, e£, , ?£
ANA
c.
impudent, immodest, importunate,
Nem. 11. 59. immoderate, vast. —
3
s. , shame- . ,
A
I am impudent— impu-
dently deny, Thuc. 1. 37.
to want self-respect towards one
A
—— ——
96
.

, ,
,, II. s. 593, a tu- another, i. e. to be insensible of one an-
mult eager for hostility. "haaz . other's reproach or praise, . 8. 33.
521, an eager stone, a stone hurled with am shameless, feel no

,
I

^,§ , ,
an eager hand, a stone winged with impe- shame, Arist. Rhet. 3. 11. 3.

,
,
tuosity, or a huge stone, to impu- q, effrontery, impudence,

,
eyes,

,
,,
Luke
, ,
dence, immodesty,

,
or avaionv, adv.
without shame, impudently, Dem. 229. 3.
to view the sun
with unblushing eyes, i. e. fixed unaverted

,, -
,
impudence, importunity,

,
see Arist. Rhet. 2. 3. 5.

1. 5. 7.
ov,
priv.
out cause or blame.

ing up
free

I cleanse the
imp unties, purge,
from

fault, blameless,
adv. with-

stomach by throw-
. ava-
.

,
11. 8. its 2. 2. 1 5.
cv, I am purified — purify myself.

,
6, q,
having no blood, bloodless, II. s. 342. Eum. f. 7&), I sit up, Luke 17. 15.

^,
302.

, , ,, ,
, adv. without blood, a, I become new.

,
at . 363. Heb. 6. 6, scil.
ov, having flesh without blood, to renew themselves again unto repentance,
Anacr. 43. a, again to repent, i. e. to incur the necessity
I refuse, dissent, disown, deny,
,
of anewrepentance after having fallen away.

,
,
,, ,
reject, opp. to sKetiusa, to consent, avai-

,
,,/],
thou deniest, givest up the hope, Od.
f. I make new, renovate.
is renewed, 2 Cor. 4. 16.

,
. 149. subj. avyvrjTxi, for should renovation, Tit.3.5.

,;.
,
decline,

,,
,,
II. ;. 506.

denied,
imp.
II.

for
.

500. aor. 1. m, avyva-
refused, denied,
for av/i-


imp.
f. or
light up, Od. y. 13.
1 call upon or back
appeal to as a witness, Dem. 799. in-

, —

,
II. -. 204. inf. for voke—recall appeal to, exhort with a

^,
^,— , 7\,
to refuse, reject, Od. . 651.

,
loud voice call, Thuc. 1. 3.

,
or pass, avy- I summon for myself, E. 7. 4. 33.
f. p.
aor. 2.
used actively, I take up take up the dead, —
m.
Thuc. 7. 71.
, , imploring, invocation,


bury take up from the foundation, over- , f. -, I unveil, open, 2 Cor.2. 1 4

turn take away from the earth, kill, Luke the day in which the,

,
cv,
22. 2. —
take up war, make ioar, take up a bride unveiled herself after marriage, name-
— ,
,
question, give for answer, A. 3. 1. 5. take ly, the third, gifts pre-
up my

, , ,.
recover, receive, Luc. 2. 104.
take up from the ground, tollo, under-
take to educate, educate, Acts 7. 21. opp.

, sented to the bride on being unveiled, by


the bridegroom, Long. 4.
f. -, I bend back my course,

,

/,
, remove, refute, Dem. 141. —go backwards and
to return, Acts 18. 21.
perf. part. Ion. hav- forwards, Polyb. 5. 102. 7.
ing taken up, won in the games, Herod. 6. 36. without thorns, destitute
ov, 6,

,
, overthrowing, the taking
37,

of bristles or fins, Herod. 4. 53. ,

,
away of the dead, i. e. burying them, Po- Aj/ii/£5crT<y,I swallow up, devour, Herod. 2.93.
lyb.

, - , ,, ,
5. 86. 4.

senseless, stupid
cv, 6, q,
—void of pain, easy death.
void of sense,

Thuc. 1. 69.

as a person in bed
he who
f.

— recline at table. 6 ava-


reclines, a guest,
— Ilean upon— erect,am fixed up, Thuc.
I sit

Mat. 22.
up

,
to stupidity, 10.

, , , one who is unacquainted with 3. 114. for are de-

,
himself, ignorant of his frame, avai- own dicated, Herod. 1. 41.
adv. without sense or sensibility, , ,
Castor and Pollux, called

, ava-
as the sons of Jupiter

, ,
stupidly, be-

, , \,
, , ,,
ing insensible of evils.

-,
1. 72.

-,. , ',
Herod.

decent, Thuc.
5.
,,
f.

31.
,
aor.
stupidity,

2. 52.
I

ov,
Theo. Char. 13.
consume, waste, Herod.

consumption, expense,

6,
I start up, K.6.17.
*j, impudent, in-
adv. im-
,
a temple in honour of them

126. aor.
f. , 1.
,
a work-
house, Dem. 1120. 24. In this place slaves
were exposed to sale.
6, echo, clack, Orest. 183.

mix up, blend with, Bacch.


ava
I

f. ,
for kqyi-
he mixed up the goblet.

^,
I bring to

a head
ava-

pudently. sum up, comprehend under one common


,
,
97
——

head, Ephes. 1. 10.


ANA
, ,,,
— —

, for
, xvx
ANA
, by force.

98

, -
a summary view, recapitulation. f. I institute a judicial in-
I burst, gush forth, II. 507. . quiry into, examine, Acts 17. 11. decide, —
,
,^ , f. announce, proclaim, Plut.
,,,,
E. 5. 3. 25.

,585.

to danger, risk,


f.
f. Iexpose myself again
Herod. 8. 68.
\, I stir up again, agitate anew
awake, said of a disease that is disturbed
f.
examination, scrutiny,

f. ,
I draw or pull back-
cause a vessel to move backward without
5.Q.
I clap the hands, applaud.

turning it, but by directing the oar forward


.

,
, ,
after being at rest, Trach. 1260. renew a

,
war

/, ,

Polyb. 10.

,
sift a person,
7. 4.
i. e. examine

agitation, (Ed. T. 749.



closely,
and keeping the face towards the stern.

,
This is expressed by

,, they rowed by striking back towards


the stern, Herod. 8. 84. I sing,
--

,, ,
,, )
I blend chaunt, warble, Theo. 4. 31. prepare —

,
,,

,
with,mixup

, ,
f.
temper,Hipp.254.Plut.8.476.
aor. 2.
claim, shout, bark aloud,

1. 94.
f.

aor.

,
1.4. 15.
I ex-

I loudly lament, Bion.


1.
.
moaned over,
begin a discourse, see Polyb. Lex. xvx-

thol. 2. p. 1.
to strike nectar, i. e. to
awaken on the lyre the sweetest song, An-
(rather
cease further to recede, do

,
Theo. not longer defer, Luc. 1. 49. see note by

,
1. 74.
f. I bend or incline the head Hemster. assailing or bearing
to the shoulder,
.', Orest. 1471. tear up from
they tore up, Thuc.
down upon, Thuc.
necessary to withhold, must repress.
7. 38. it is

, ,, ,,
the roots,
76. bend back, return, holding back, retreat, Thuc. 7. 62.
2.
Polyb. 18. 22. 4.— reflect the light, f. ,, .
I recover, repossess,
avit«A6> wf!/oz/,thereflectionofthelight.
,, (

q, the refraction of light.


bend back
Herod. 3. 73.
f. ,
,
attach,
I
1. 3. 8.

mix up, PlutUS, 302.



bend forward,

,
f. p. I f. I roll back
a covering, open, disclose, Od. . 524. aor. Orest. 231. —
unfold into being, produce,

,
having bent him- Plut. 6. 405. I roll myself

,
I. part. pass,
self backward, . 371.
as to rest against
—place on side so
a wall — recline or
its back, roll in a contrary course, change or
fluctuate as fortune, Arist. Ethic, x. 10.

,,
sit
down Mark ,
/,
at table, 6. 39. v\, a revolution, Polyb. 6.

, ,.
),
f.

f.
I
,
belch forth, emit a torrent.

,
I unthread, reverse.
I commune with another,
9. 10.
my way
from
back, Long. 22.
I
f. I roll

tumble, overturn with


or wind

,
,
~,
II. 26. 2.

consult propose for deliberation, Polyb.
I ask counsel for
myself, Nubes, 470. communicate, confer,
Theoph. Char. 4.
I marshal, arrange, U. s. 824.
great noise,

head,

,
f. ,
11.

make straight, Luke

sea, Aves, 146.



.
13. 1 1
379.
unbend, raise up my
I
recover
my spirits emerge into view as a ship at
we have
.

, , , ,, , ,
on, not consequent, not harmo- raised our eyes, looked up to, Cycl. 212.

,
nizing with what goes before.
,,
the want of concord,
discord or discrepancy in syntax. , adv. watchfully, carefully,

Herod. 1. 24.
to be watchful of any thing,

f. ,
I carry back or up, con- Thuc. 8. 102, that they might carefully
vey to a higher ground I watch them.
,
bear myself up under evils, Hipp. 831.

, ,
recover, Aw. 2. 10. 1.

xvxxoftUYi,

,
/7, -, f.
,
to re-
cover myself, escape, return, Polyb. 1. 38. 5.
, carrying back, recovery of
things lost, restoration, Dem. 250. 13.
I dart, spout up, II. . 113.
,
,,,
strain,
f.

pend the motion of a hove to re-


curb, S. Elect. 734. Herod. 9. 13.
,
ship,

, cessation, truce, Thuc. 5. 32.


f. , I shout in going to
f. -,
f.

p. ,
I sus-

battle.

, f. aor. 2. aor. 2. aor. take up, aor. 1 . pass, xve-


pass, beat back the edge, blunt
I he was taken up, Acts 1. 2. take —
— cut offthe fastenings of a door, Od. 47. . —
up arms, put on take up a load, carry,
— —
, ,
restrain, hinder, Gal. 5. 7. convey take up a person for an associate
,
, f.

f.

out, bawl, exclaim,


f.
I lift up, Orest. 218.

,\,
alleviation, relief, (Ed. T. 218.
I listen to, S.
aor. 2.
Theo.
Elect. 81.

16. 12.
I cry
or friend, gain, ingratiate, Arist. Rhet. 1.1.
10.— take up a wife, marry take up the
mouth of a horse, curb take up for my use,



appropriate take up an office, undertake,

assume raise asain. reanimate, I?£>. 2. 15.

— . — — —

,
99

, , —
ANA
take up to carry, bring with take up
I
a book, read take up strength, recover.
to receive the light again,

part. pres. ,,
ing or untying, 109.

ANA
unravelled the web by night, Od.


for
loosen a ship, weigh
/3.
100
105.
undo-

,
come

,.
Thuc.
again to

5.
,—
65.
,
life,

q,
Orest. 285.
recovery or restitution,
ascension.
anchor loosen an assembly, dissolve
loosen an animal that travels, put up, rest
— loosen myself from a faidt, retrieve, ef-

,,
not true, unsound, hollow, face, E. 7. 5. 18.— loosen a decree, set aside,

Long. 3. 4. fr.
f. ,,— shine forth, break out
I
rescind, Plut. 2. 704.
the body, die, Phil. 1. 23.

loosen the soul from

return, Polyb.

,
again in a flame blaze out, Mosch. 4. 103. 4. 68. 4. discharge, correct, compensate,
,

,
&, 6, q, free from Dem. 187. 24.
— ,,,

, ,
pain or sorrow unfeeling, cruel, Hipp. dissolution, deliverance from

,, ,
— —
.
1386. callous. *vfiiAy;9TOT££oc,morestupid, evil, S. Elect. 142. the dividing of a com-

,
Thuc. 2. 40. adv. without pound into its constituent parts, analysis.

,^ ,
pain or grief, a priv. , ov, capable of analysing or

. ,
stupidity, Dem. 237. 13.
,
solving analytic science, Arist. Rhet. 1. 4. 5.

,
f. |e», I pick up, f. I desire eagerly, spread
—read,
,,, collect, II. .
•—select, Plut. 6. 293.

,
754.
that which is read or recorded, A. 2. 1. 12.
furiously, rage as fire, II. . 490.

. 3. 1. 15. ,
,,, inoffensive, faultless,

.
, , ,, ,,
conformable, proportionable,
ov, adv. without sin or fault, 2. 8. 5.
fit.

1. 182.—
scil. ,
it is reasonable, Luc.

adv. conformably, in
ov, not to be traversed by a
waggon or chariot, a priv. Herod.

,
proportion or unison, hence analogous. 2. 108.

, ,, ,
f. I am conformable, similar, or f. ~£., I wipe, wash

, in proportion,

,
ren-
dered like the siiblime by the composition

away expiate, Od. r. 92. Herod. 1. 155.
f.

.
I re-

,
new

,
alone, Long. 40. the battle, I fight again, 3. 1. 12.

,
the same ratio, proportion, ,, ij, not to be mounted, in-
.
,
analogy— that rule or law by which the

,
,
accessible, 4. 5. 15.
Gospel represents the Almighty as distri- », I sing again, warble forth,

,
f.

buting talentsto differentservants,Rom. 1 2.5. Theo.

,,,,), ,—
17. 113.

— .,,
f. I compute, reason, f. aor. 1. —

,
think
Dem.

, , .,
262. , ,
infer,
802. nit.

5.— design, E.
,
2. 1. 4.— call

reflection, proportion,
5. 1. 16.
to mind,

Dem.
wait patiently, earnestly look
I
for, 1 Thess. 1. 10. stay to receive the
enemy, sustain, await, Hec. 1263.
ov, situated between, intermedi-

,
I lick up, Herod. 1. 64. ate, Herod. 2. 108. adv. in the

,
incapable of middle, between.

,
ov,

,
3

healing, unavailing— incapable of being


healed, irremediable. Bion. a priv. f. ,
ov, quite full, Dem. 779. 25. ava-
I nil up, cram, Range, 1083.

2, , , Dor. for
of the grave, Alcest. 449.
,—
sunless, said
repass
f. -/\, I measure back a way,
—measure out— experience, find
experience, Ion. 1271. — measure the
by-

,
, ,, , ^,
— consume men,

,, ,
expend, A.
, . 7. 7. 21.
destroy
f.

— waste time,
consume/ood
I
consume money,
E. 6. 2. 8.
or value, estimate, E. Elect. 51.
to re-measure words, repeat,
I
,- size

, ) ,
waste, expense,

,
3. 6. 6.
ov, incapable of being taken, im-

,
pregnable, A. 5. 2. 15.— not to be taken

,, ,,
consumption, Orest.
125.
14. — measure out, set, Theo. 24.
giving an abun-
dant measure of tears, shedding tears abun-
dantly, Iphig. T. 346.

—,

, , ,
by bribes, incorruptible. measuring again, estimate.
,
,, . —
{, weak in body, infirm
weak in mind, timid, cowardly, II. 201 .
f. imp.
I mix up, blend, intermix with,

,
ij, feebleness, cowardice, 11.^.74. Od. . 41. meet together in a confused

, . ,,
I spring up, Theo. 8. 88. jump — body, Dem. 1259. 8. Ion.

,
upon or back, for they are mixed or con-

,) , , , ,
ov, without salt, insipid, fused, Herod. 1. 146.
Mark 9. 50.
ov,
O. 20. 12.
unseasoned with
fr. ,
salt— having
,,,
adv. mixed to-
gether, in confusion, promiscuously be- —
no salt, hungry, Od. . 228. tween, together, Theo. Ep. 5. 3.
I loosen, untie, vac ov, not having a knot, without
(scil. for imperf. knots, K. 2. 5. , to fasten.
— — —— —

,, ,
ANA
,,
101 ANA 102

,, ,
on himself.

perf. part,

xftpuxasi,

,
,

of

for
, ,.
ou,
xux/a/xsuog,
Herod. 7. 69, having put on lions'
one who

xuxpuwu,
for
f.

-,
fastens a

will
scil.

, .
garment xuxuvTog, for

skins,

put in mind.
admonish,
fitable, Theo.

347. Call.
ANA&I02,

,,
6.
f.
15. 87.

114.
ou, unworthy, incompetent

',
not deserving, Heracl. 527, unmerited,
I
,
,
useless,

dry up, exhaust,


unpro-

II. .

,
Pyth. 4. 96. aor. 1. thou hast Iphig. A. 852. adv. unworthily,
reminded, Od. y. 211. aor.
,,, 1. cptat. xp- unbecomingly.

, ,-
for might recall to f. I deem unworthy, treat an-
mind, Pyth. 1. 91. xuxpuxopxi, other in an unbecoming manner, dishonour,

,, ,
,
vw-Opxi, I call back to mind, remember, E. Elect. -256.
recollect, Heb. 10. 32. Ion. for adj. ruling the lyre, an

,,, ,
rod. 1.
he traces back, records, He-
173.
epithet of ocl^s or songs, to which the lyre
is subservient,
,,
Olym. 2. 1. , ^,.
,
recollection, reminiscence, covering for the legs or

~,commemoration, Luke

/, I
22. 19.
come back, pervade, Hec.
,,, ,. 928.
thighs, trowsers,
/CKXt.
Herod. 7. 64. called also

Aux

.I

,, ,
bellow, Apoll. 3. 1300.
Aux /,,,
,
I murmur. Ion.
roared as the troubled sea, Od. . 238.
short and one long
gj;<;<s.j,instructanew,Equit.l
anapaest, a foot consisting of
syllable.
096.
two

,
I unbar adoor, Med. 1317.

,
adv.back again,in acontrary order.

,,
f.


, ,^,,
Call. 6. 125.

,
without a caul or fillet, f. shake up raise a spear
so as to be in a posture to hurl it, aor. 1.

,,
I groan, murmur xusKvihi, instigated, Bacch. 1179. aor. 2.

.
deeply,

,
Prom. 748. part, Ion. having
ov, unequivocal — poized, II. y. 355. I lift my-
adv. without doubt, unquestionably, x, self up, jump up, II. . 692. imp.
<<-,
,, \,
able—

,,
without dispute or controversy, unques-
ou, unquestion-
adv.
,
,. ,
for
This

,,
last may be
jumped, reared,

,,
fr.

a change of
§.
xux, ,
lot,
85.

,, /
tionably, Air. 4. 2. 32. Olym. 7. 10.
undisputed, unques-
ou, Aj/i*'r«ffffw,f.«ff«,sprinkleupon,Olym.l0.115.
tionable, Thuc. easily found out
1. 132.— AN f. I cause a person to
— adv. without dispute, stop, stop the voice, Trach. 1278. the ac-
I

,unquestionably, Dem. 218. 19.


Auxuh^og, ou, unmanly, to xuxuh^o-
tive voice has often a reflex sense, the re-
ciprocal pronoun being understood, see
-,, ,,
, ,
the most cowardly thing of all, Dem. GEd. C. 1175. xux f. I

,37. 7.— without a husband, fr. x, xuyh>

,,

,
xuxuh^ix, or xux^^itx,

f.
unmanliness,

,
cowardice, sluggishness, A. 9. 5. Dem. 199.
I renew, renovate
sanction anew— recall to mind, Polyb.
5. 56. 7. Helen. 721. Ephes. 4. 23.
eog, , renewal, renovation, Thuc.
,

grave, Anthol. 1. 473.
cease.

'',,— ,—
refreshment
%\. , ,',

stop myself rest, repose— repose in the
tarry

,,
comfort —
rest, repose, recreation,
deliverance —
end, opp. to

,—
Thuc. 2. 75, by
6. 82.

-,
turns, so that each in his turn might enjoy

,
nod

, ,
Auxuwo),

,--,
f. I show unwillingness by a
— refuse — forbid by an expression of the
.
rest—
Hipp. 1137.
places

, , a place of
of

— a sea-
rest,

-
altars,

,
face, Od. 129. xux rest

,
Auxviopxi, I go up. for son for rest, night, At. 4. 3. 3.

,
i. e.
Od. . , dissuade — persuade — in-
, ,
rises, 192. uiopxi. f. I
f. I awaken out of drunken- vite, prompt, induce, Philip. 73.
ness,amsoberafterintoxication,2Tim.2.26. peuot induced by gifts, i. e.
— appease, Equit.
,,
ou, not to be contradicted, in- bribed, At. 1. 5. 3. 68.
— ,
,
controvertible, Acts 1 9. 36.
adv. beyond contradiction.
,
f.
ou, persuasive, Nub. 1073.
I try again, make a fair

,,
7,
sg, up-hill, xuxurx, for xuxu- trial of, Thuc. 7. 7. Dem. 1229. 10.— xux-
nx, steep
Ai/ssf,

tively,
xuaZ, a royal
ascents, acclivities,
6,

vereign—lord, master, Od.


II. -. 116.

voc. xux, a king, ruler, so-


556. adjec-
Seot, sovereign gods,
allar.
o. ,),,,
send up,
dispatch, Luke
I

f.

II. 7.
,,
make a trial of, Polyb. 26. 7. 9.
an attempt, Polyb.

5.
23. 7.
12.— send
I
10. 20. 6.
send back,
forth, emit,

2
— — — ——

,
I I

,,
, ,, -
, ,, ,,,,,,,/,
103 ANA
, conveyance, remittance.
pass.
f. ,.
open a

263. —breathe
imperat.
ANA
after, aspire to,
breathe outswo&e^amconsumeu^Olym. 8.47.

thy breath, take respite, II.


recover
222. .
Nem.
104
7. 7.

, ,,
I door,
. 122. lay open a passage—widely open . 359, he breathed

,
for

,
II.

— spead
,
my eyes out the sails of a ship, II. again, recovered, aor. 1. pass.

,
a. 480. Olym. 6. 45. open, for or II. s. 697, he

-,
u
wide sea, Herod. 8. 60.
fly upward, ava-
to
recovered himself.

ration, respite,
— breath, respi-
800. Nub. 627. .
,
,
,
inf. II.

,
open, expand, Olym. 6. 45. f. I retreat, retrace retrace
on the words or ideas that are erroneous, retract,

.
part. pass, stretching out himself

^,
,back, Isthm.

,
a horse, .
f.
4. 80.
«ov»,
1. 4. 4.
I

up jump upon
spring
leap upon a wall.

rectify, Herod. 2. 116.
ov,
f. \,

re-examine, 5. 92.
unredeemed,U.ei.99.
I turn f. ~,
,

,
ov, 6, jj, maimed, Luke 14. 13. over again, revolve, apov^av

-
ava,-
,-, .,
-, Pyth. 6. 2, we again turn up the

, /,
I maim, mutilate, Philip. 14.

',. ,

,
mutilation, Arist. Rh et. 2. 8. 1 0. soil of the graces, again cultivate poetic
— —
ground turn over in my mind, consider,
was —

,
imp. full Philoct. 1267.

,
, ,
fill up fill up with shame, cover, over-

,
whelm. Dem. 466.— drink the full measure

/, ^,
of evil, suffer, Herod. 6. 12.



?, m.
f. , p.
aor. 2.
inexcusable, Rom. 1. 20.
ov,
a conductor, Mercury.
ov,
ov, unwashed, Equit. 356.
f. I exact, en-
force payment— receive pay as a soldier, A.
,

, ,
f.

, . , ,,,
I fall on the back
back, fall 7. 7. 19. ocv, Thuc. 8. 107,
bend back as in pulling an oar become — theyexacted contributions
supine, am dejected, Thuc. 1. 70.— recline I enforce for myself.
at table, Luke 11. 37. — I am remiss, Dem. for being changed
567. 12. into , f. \, I up, cause to flow, shed
fill

ov, o, ij, GEd. T. 480, wander- tears, II. /. 433. see also for

, ,,
ing up and down in pursuit of the offender

,
him: others read
of their aim. ,
-^,
through all his mazes, and finally overtaking
unerring, sure

,
filled the sails, a. 481.

agitate,
f.

buoy with hope, Herod.


Eur. Supp. 89.
, I rise, soar

I
2.
on wings
115.

— alarm,

, , , ,
am on

,
or f. I feign the wing, fluctuate in uncertainty,

anew, re-fashion imagine, Polyb. 3. 94.2. E. 3. 4. 2. —
am furnished with wings, Aves,
compose a song — mould- 1439. perf. part, buoyed on
ing himself, Plut. 6. 217. the wing, elated, intent, 2. 9. 5.

, ,
-
f. fa, I entwine, Olym. 2. 135. f. p. I unfold, ex-
— open a volume, Herod. 48.— ex-

,
f. Ion. I sail back plain 1.
— set sai}j Polyb. 1. 25. 9.— return with a pand thetuings — extend wings of an army. the
-/\, , unfolding.

,
fleet,

make up
Herod.
Az/it5rAfiyc,iy</,a,iilledup
f.

f.
8. 70.

,
,
I
the deficiency, Od.
I
fill
)

fill
crowded,Herod.4.31.
again, replenish
e.

up a gap
302.
— fulfil,
,
,
,—
f.
f.
vj,

the unfolded beams, effulgence of the

,,
sun the expanse of heaven, Ion. 1445.

,
I spit out, An tig. 1021.
aor. I blow up into
vfhiov

,,- ,
,

,
complete—fill up the place of another, a flame, Luke 12. 49. kindle light up the
1 Cor. 14. 16.— fill up the wants of another, torch of discord, Jam. 3. 6. fasten, cling —

,
satisfy, Dem. 1466. I fill to a thing as a flame does to that which it

, —

,, , - , , , .
up for myself, Helen. 913. store, consumes, tie, suspend— attach to.
recovered its full light, Thuc. 2. 28. Od. .
86, to light on us the torch

\,
to complete.
,
,
must fulfil, it is

fulfilment, accomplishment.
throw out
necessary

my breath,
of scorn, stigmatise with scorn.

-,
report, am
aor. 2.
informed, A. 5. 7. 1.
I hear a

ov, noised abroad, heard of, noto-

,
f. I

,. ,,
respire, imp. they breathed again, rious, Herod. 6. 64. Od. 273. avx,
had time to breathe, recovered, II. . 327.

,
aor. 1 . optat. iEol. with the gen. return of the sea or a flood, i. e. the ebbing
might have respite from his la- —
of the tide return of the deluge to the
bour, r. 227. aor. 1. pass. inf. bowels of the earth, Olym. 9. 78.
to have respite, to be refreshed, Theo. 25. ov, disabled, weak, Orest. 228.
,, ,,ANA,
105

,
— ——— —

unnumbered, ,
, ,
, ,
.

in- I treat
ANA
wantonly, Vesp. 61.
106
— .

,
.,
numerable, Isthm. 5. 64. Ajax, 655.

review,
of no estimation.

Dem.
I number
346. 20.
not to be numbered, innu-
ov,
merable, Olym. 7. 45. fr.

;,
priv.
Avagtrog, without a dinner, Theo. 15. 147.
,, fr.

,/
for myself, recount,

.
x, I move, rush up.

f.,
plup. pass, squirted up, II.
for ecve-
458.
I gather
or pack up furniture for removing— convey

goods that have been collected collect goods
among a conquered people, plunder— move,
transfer a camp,
.

,
^
',
13.
,

, ,
,,
6, q, unsubdued, independent.

Eum. 529.
-og, ov, unfit, discordant, Aw. 3. 10.

congruity of the thing

^, , /,
fitness, incongruity.
(>., the in-
xg, un-
,, Acts 15. 24, harnessing, i. e. putting
a yoke upon your very souls to lead you
away into bondage, see ver. 10. overturn
a treaty, Polyb. 9. 31. 6.
untrained. «,
adv. without discipline,
,
8. 8. 12.

.
,-
^, I take up arms, seize they are such as are un-

,
f.

snatch up as

, vulture does his prey, tear disciplined or inelegant.


,

, ,, ,-.
up from the roots, utterly destroy xvxq-
.6 f. fix the head on a pike,

-, ,,
Thuc. 6. 104, taken up empale, crucify, Herod. 1. 128.
by the wind, overtaken by a storm I de- — f. kick up with the heels.
feat, plunder, see II. . 276. Ajax, 1006. f. I review— reflect upon,

, ,. , ,
, ov, men-seizing, devouring Thuc.7.42. consider thorough ly,Thesm. 6 73.

,\, -
-,
men, the Sphinx, Septem, 778.
sc.
ov, snatched away, Hec. 206.
f. I tear up the root.
draw up from a pit draw
I —

,, ,
,
,,
,,

,
f. ,,I declare, proclaim.

being appointed, E. 1. 4. 8.
f. I flow up, ascend.

, proclamation, Dem. 244. 21



through a wall, aor. 1.
f. I

broke through, Theo. 22. 12. draw asun-


,
-,
break


they
back into heaven, Acts 11. 10.— draw up
the brows so as to appear supercilious
up the boundaries, tear up, throw down
draw up a weapon from the body, extract
draw

draw out my words, prolong, protract, Ajax,


302.— tear, rip up a grave, Med. 1379.
ov, drawn up, snatched, torn

.
der a cord till it bursts, 22. 172. II. n. 461.

,
burst forth, cause to burst forth

, ,
pass, c/vi^puynv,
Plut. 1. 14.

.—
I
pour out
hoarse or loud voice, Equit. 623. aor. 2
hence —,
break out as a
——

,—
aor. 2.
disease,
away, Herod. 5. 12. 106. Polyb. 24. 8. 6.

I act as
Dor. for avwwrog, unsubdued,
invincible, Theo. 6. 46. fr. ,
,], a queen, mistress,
a king, rule,
tect, II. x.38.seeavx% — ,,
.
,. ,
command — guard, pro-
am ruled,

up — up as a bidl with his horn hurl a


toss
f. I throw
-, ,
am under the power of a king, Theo.
a rising up— the
1 7.

removal
92.

.
«j,

,
quoit — throw up the waves in rowing, Od. of a people from their abodes, devastation

rod. 7. 50. /,
. 75.— dash through dangers, scatter, He-
to defy
the raising /"«'«//— resurrection of the dead

, -,
commotion,riot, Polyb. 40. 2. 10.
danger, Thuc. 4. 95.

),
,
f. ,
great noise, ingulph, Od. ,. 104.
— ,,,
, , ,,
-,
I swallow up with a

f. I
xvxtxtyiq, and ov, o, a person
who overturns, a despoiler, Septem, 1017.
ov, overturned, At. 4. 2. 29.
f. turn upside down, disturb,

,
recover my strength, recover, Thuc. 7. 46.

,
ov, unfit

f. ,

not fit to associate with,
cruel, unrelenting, #priv.«£ojtofit,Il.<y.365.
I attach a thing, suspend
from, hang upon, Dem. 1480. 5.
Acts 17. 6.

-,
f.

<?,
crucify again, Heb. 6. 6.
,,
elevation, Long, 7.
I fix on a stake or a cross,

-,,
,
xvxq- imp. I grow up,

.
I attach to myself, join to my yoke,

— &, ,. \.7\,\
shoot forth like ears of corn, Apoll. 3. 1354.

-,.
,
1 . 1 5. conciliate
. am ready, Herod. 6. 8 8. I tread back, retrace, xh. 644.

,
.
, , , without a leader, II. . 703.

,, dress up,
— without a beginning, priv. — —
put on send back repulse an assailant,

, -, ,
xg, , the want of government, in- A. 5. 4. 12. am removed
subordination, h. anarchy. aor. 2. pass. xvi^xKr v,wa& restrained —
,
I re-
l

I draw back with a chain, I move a garment.


curb, see note on Hipp. 237. Apoll. 1.391. f. I fetch a deep ,
f. , I stir up, inflame —
wave the sigh, lament, Orest. 156,
hand, Thuc. 4. 38. —
shake off a garment*— throws out his breath at short intervals,
raise up a thing so as to strike, threaten, opp. to ,,
to take in his breath, he
Dem. 784. 22. breathes hard and quickly gasp, Anacr. 21 —
— — — — —

,
107

,, ,
,\1.860,
,), ,
f. I
ANA
crown, braid,
1 have my temples entwined.
I fix or rear a tree, xh. 650.
,
,
, ,,
ANA

,,
stretching out, extension.
repair, rebuild, E. 4. 4. 18.
108

,
f. ov, 6, a repairing, rebuilding.

,
, ,,&., ,,
gaps,

groan, sigh deeply,

reverse, pervert
f.

the mouth of a trench,


the jaws so as to swallow

f. ,

,
tyj'j

f.
I open the mouth
. 7. 5.
— cause to open
i7>t(pci'j£nzv,Ph\t.8. 583.

II. . 9.
turn up, overturn,
I

turn back, return dis-


7.

f.

--
— open
— open
,

in

I
4. 16.

risen

7\, ,

f. iha, p.
— cause to
born, Isthm.6. 1 11.
to spring up, II. . 777.—
rise, 5. 45.

'.,
aor. 1. caused

raisemyself,kindle,spreadfl5 aflame,
Isthm. 4. 111.
, a rising of the sun place of
the sun rising, the east.
I am
I rise,

— cause


Mat.
to be

,
,
order, convulse, Thuc. 2. 49. vj
}
ov, of the east, eastern.

turn myself back


I conduct myself, — dissect, ,
accurate de-

behave am occupied about traverse, so- — scription, Long. 32. 5. anatomy.

,
journ, Mat. 17. 22.
xvx or Od. v. 326, I dwell, tarry in
sc. -[(, 2. —
,,
put up or
f. y\ao), p.

-,
aor. 1. I

-, ,,
another country. —
upon, suspend put a load upon a beast
a turning of the eyes, K. 4. 4. put up« temple, erect, dedicate put a thing —
, turning back, Thuc. 2. 89.
-, —
to another'' s account, ascribe, refer, attribute
— put up

,
overthrow, reverse— behaviour, Gal. I. 13. to view, explain, relate, Acts 25.

, ,
I turn back, turn on all sides, 14.— fit, accommodate, Polyb. 24. 3. 9.
Hes. x. 121. turn up and down for the put up the hand to vote, decree, determine,
purpose of examining, Od. . —
Herod. 2. 134. put up a treasure, store

,
394.
f. ',
I raise the petticoat, tuck aor. 2. put up for my-
up the clothes, said of immodest women,
Herod.

rat.
shield
,),


2. 60.

hold, lift up a
see
raise up the hands, hold forth lamps,
f.

/,

I
fit, impe-


,
self,

, ,
claim, appropriate

ticle, make
f.
,
or position, Att. 1. 2. 24.
f.

,

change a sentiment

I raise the price of an ar-

a higher demand, Herod. 9. 33.


I shake or toss up vio-

,
light up, Med. 1027.

,
,
5. 106.— hold
pierce, II. .
rise up as the sun
spring up as an effect from its cause, Herod.

310.
its

I hold myself up, endure, perse-

vere—stretch forth, Theo. 22. 1 29.


hold out. stretch, Theo. 22. 129.

way through as an arrow,

,
lently, agitate the sails, Orest. 342.

up under a

/, ,,
2. 1.

sume
thing,
Phcen. 60.
f. , I
fresh courage, Alcest. 277.
poet, f.
aor. 2. /, .
endure to the end,

become bold

,
aor. 2. xvs-
I

again, as-
bear
I.

,
x>xo,!/,xl/o,tobeec\m'e,O..63.
277. —
f.
f.

,
, up, rend, Theo. 25.
I split
rip open the belly, Herod. 1. 123.
aor. ,,—
1. m. I
—aor. 2. pass,
— turn up a
back an assailant, repulse
overturn, overset — turn up
supplant, trample upon — turn up foun-
,
I

the heels, trip,


the
turn
vessel,

,
bring back in safety, restore an exile pre- dation,undermine, 2 Tim. 2. 18.

, -
, ,
serve, recover, Herod. 1. 106.

rescue/row
death realise a fable or apply it to a real
fact, Plut. 4. 86.

self am preserved,
I save my-,,
aor. 1 inf.

.
^, he had his mind overwhelmed, was
overwhelmed ivith sorrow, Theo. 8. 90.
(>, , §,
,—
f.
overthrow, Long. 9. 6.
I support myself or feed
-
,to be safely restored, E. 4. 8. 28.

),
Att. ,.,
I disturb, alarm

am
I confounded.
upon serve up food, perf. m.
thou hast supplied with fresh nutri-
ment a pain that ought to close its eye or

.
,
,
thrown into confusion, A. 1.7. 15. be lulled asleep, hast added fresh fuel to

,, Att. f.

new model, forge


aor. 1. m. xve- , the poison that inflames me, Trach. 1026.
I or falsify the Dr. Maltby with Porson erroneously sup-
Gospel, Luke 1. 1. alluding
to some pre- poses the root to be A similar
tended evangelists, who attempted to give a mistake is committed byReiske, who takes
false account of Christ. for having

,.,,
Avxtsi, or xuxtI, adv. without injur} or loss,
with impunity, Med. 1357. xrq. ,
r
fed upon the vitals of their country, so as to
devour its freedom and independence, Dem.

raise

my

uvxTsiuopxi, I
I stretch through,
hands to heaven—extend the wings
erect the eagle.

menace, Dem. 389.— rouse the


Plut. 6. 221.
lift up a sword as if to strike
attention,
— ,, ,
-,
324. 27.
aor. 1. inf.
animate,

support, maintain,

5. 2. 1


8. 3. 15.
to nurse up the mind,
5.
aor. 2.
up, ascend rapidly run up as a tree grow-
ing —squirt, gush out run back, recede,—
.
I run
— — — — —
109

, ,
,
retreat, . 599.
ANA
,
ANA
recover my senses after
110

,
II. f. I
Olym. 8. 72, I caused fame to a delirium or intoxication, A. 4. 8. 16.
his
,
, ,
mount in song retrace my

, , ,, ,, -
down,
bing.
,,
mend, reform, Polyb.
subject, revert to.

pat,
f. -,
K.

f. ,

6. 26. —
2. IS. 4.

rub up and
I
wear out by rub-

Equit. 311.
I disturb,
errors,
—retraces
i. e.

111.


and
f.

cause to swell
I revolve in my mind,
am anxious to gain a certain end, Olym. 1.

f. ,
f.
p.
with blood, huddle, confound, Herod. 1.103.
I puff up

breathe forth, utter, —


\,
I mix up

^, , unillumined, Prom. 1064. Theo. 1 2. 24. fetching a deep

,
ov,

,
without speech, breath, panting, Apoll. 2. 433.

^ , . ,, , ,
mute, Od. s. 456. —
unheard of, impious, I am puffed up, swell with pride,
,
Ajax, 961.
ov,
avhvi.
unutterable, strange,Ion.783.
II. 7. 2. 7.
, I produce, Theo. 10. 40.

,,, , ?, ,
f.

&,,,
ava,
,,
f.
, , a torrent, Anacr. 7.
aor. 1.
Theo.
I shout,shriek.

4. 37.
f. hold up to the
Plut. 1. 32.
f.

I

,
,
spring up,

I exclaim,
aor. 2.
grow

Luke
go back, retreat, A.
naturally,

1. 42.
inf.

,
light, disclose, reveal, II. a. 87. f. I 4. 1.
he rendered
conspicuous, 12. I recede, U. 264.
for
,— t\.

for

-, - ^,
threw lustre upon, Nem. 9.29. aor. 1.
declared, announced,
Pyth. 4. 109. aor. 1. m.

,,
display-
».
as a restive horse

,
the neck,
Dem.
f. I raise
throw
the mane —plunge
off the rider over

,
ed the victory in himself, Isthm. 4. 119. p. 20. 27, a small accident tumbles

,m.

, I appear, . to the ground all his greatness, Hipp.1232.

,
3. 2. 7.

II.

-, ,.,
I show myself, appear conspicuous,
. 62.
adv. openly, mani-
Equit. 638.
I open the jaws widely, gape,

,
engrave upon,Plut. 7. 556.

,
festly.

, ,
,
, ov,x\ot to be taken away.
, , bald-pated, Luc. 1.160.
-
Ai^giy, f. 1 pour upon. Imp. ave-
overspread, Anacr. 51.
,

,
the throwing up or belching

,
,, ^, ,
.

aor. 1.
f.

/\•/.,

pass.
of flames, Long. 35. 4.
,
, a pouring forth, excess,

,
I bring, carry, lead up, Od. . 1 Pet. 4. 3.
624. — convey, import — return votes, 2. 5. 9. f. I lead up the dance ce- —
—bring up Heb.
sacrifice, offer, 7. 27.— lebrate the orgies of Bacchus, Bacch. 482.
take away sin in consequence of sacrifice,
), ,—
agitate with madness, Orest. 581.

,, ,
1 Pet. 2. 24. —
endure, sustain, Thuc. 3. 38. f. I heap up raise —
— —

,
bring back, relate refer, impute, Orest. a road, Dem. 1279. 20. erect a tomb,

76. concern, relate to, Herod. 3. 71. Phanias. 8.
,. ——
,
rise up from sleep or intoxication, recover, f. I go back retreat as a con-
Nem. 11. 49. aor. 1. part, he quered army, with draw from

,
3. 3. 27.
who brought back, Herod. 3. 70. part. m. danger— return after a victory — retire,give
having repeated, 1. 86. place to a superior, 8. 4. 3.

,,

,
having brought back, 3. 148. part. pass. Dem. 354. 11.
retreat,

,returned,
,
,,
being brought back to himself,
having recovered himself, 1. 116. having
1. 141.
800.
I collect myself, Plut. 2.
the transferring of a crime
— conduct back
2. p.

— I
104.
f.

f. |<y,
,,

I
cause to retreat, bring,
I
withdraw an army, 2. 2.

breathe again, reanimate


cool, refresh by exposing to the breeze,
.

,from one

, ,
to another, Oi-est. 4. 14.
rity—a reference subterfuge, responsibi-
lity, Dem. 301. 24.

- ,,
autho-

a wooden bar, Ranse, 8.
— regale —
mitigate the pains of a wound by

fanning I dry, repair a ship by bringing it
on shore, E. 1. 5. 6.
, ,, the recovering

,
,
,
,
f. §<a, I escape by running up a hill,

-
escape danger by rising above it

,,
I escape, am acquitted, E. 2. 3. 19.

'
of the breath

\,
ment, repose.
I
—release,
please, imp.
Ion. 1604. refresh-

. -, did not

',
, , ,
f. I rekindle, Troad. 320. please, with the dot. 6c who
),

. .
f. I bubble up, II. 361. proved most acceptable, 1\..
I frighten, alarm, Vesp. 668.
,
,', not given to Venus,
not inelegant, ,
25. Att. for

/, , ,
acceptable.
proved agreeable, was

for , flowery places,


— — — — — ——
Ill

, ,
AN
flower-beds, Theo. 5. 93. Anthol. 2. 3. 68.

,
. ,,
ANE
more manly or magnanimous— av~
112

,
mound, ridge, Mosch. 4. 101. adv. in a manly manner.

ANHP,
adv. apart, in two ways,
gen. avhoog, 6, a man— aman,
opp. to a coward, a hero a man, opp. to —

',, 18. 23.
adv. after the manner of men, Theo.

gigantic
, a man-woman, hermaphro-
man, Call. 6.32.

, *, ,,
a woman, a male, husband a man, opp. to

,
,
the gods, a mortal, mankind, II. . 146.
a person— one of a whole class.

,,.
opp. to

one of the people a person in manhood,

ogoc, unmanly, cowardly, Od. ,. 301.


f. —
.
the part of a brave man, behave gallantly,
I
,, :, ,,
act
^,
dite.

,
duing her husband,

or harassing men.
. Supp. 525,
^,,
— ,, ,
, , man-killing, ''.
6,
and

combats which cause men to


Nem.
ov,
n, ov, sub-
3. 66.
fatiguing

,
,
Thuc.

,,
3. 64.
2. 63. 3. 40.

,,
, heroism, gallantry, Thuc.

,
fall,

, .^,-
.
II. . 371, on a

tomb which caused distress to the Greeks,


many of whom being wounded from behind

,,
tured enemy,
adv.
,
/,

spoils

',
man by man, Od.

person put under the feet of another


taken from a cap-
II. |. 509.
v. 14.
tog, 6,

(,
, a
,
it.

,.

,
599.
f. I
,
slay

,,
adj. man-slaying.

carnage, II. . 548.


Eum.

,
^,,
,
),
man, opp. to

as a slave, At.
I enslave,
2. 2. 2.

a slave, II. m. 475. a servile, mean
At. 4.
Ay.

, the stealing or enslaving


of men, the making men slaves, Apol. 25.

-, ,
2.
7. 6.
39.
— treat
. ,
,, ..
men-destroying, Septem, 314.

, an action against one who


protected a murderer, Dem. 647. 24.

,
with men,
ov, man-like,

,
crowded^,
358. human flesh, Od. ;.297.

\,—
,
the enslaving men, Thuc. f. I render manly transform
2. 68.
,
, ,
a man- stealer, a slave-

,
into men, Lye. 176. become a
man, arrive at manhood, Here. F. 42. aor.

,
6,
*(>*•
^,
dealer, plagiary.
who make
up
slaves of themselves,
their liberty for gain, At.
, , a slave-dealer.
1 .
who
2. 6.
men
give
1.

subj.
reached manhood, Herod.4.1 55.

might become men.


,
for 7. 149,

,
, a manly boy, a boy just
^^^, , -,
ar-

,
,,
of a

5. 40.

.
slave, servile,
,, having the sentiments
At.
adv. like a slave, ignobly.

,
4. 2. 22.

, , a puny man, Theo.


\-
, .
rived at

,. ,&,
manhood, Septem, 529.
,
wedded, conjugal, Eum. 962.

man and

^-
adj. obtaining a husband,

, a statue representing a
a sphinx, Herod. 2. 175.

,
avb(>aych;, loading a man, unwieldy, Od. I eat human flesh, Herod.4.1 07.
— ,
*. 127.

, ^,
avhofia, Ion. avb^/iin, q, manliness, fortitude, ,,
^, ,,
or
, a man-slayer, homicide, Septem,
,
-, , , manslaughter.
courage, opp. to At. 4. 6. 10. 578.

,litude to the
like
human
a, ov, Ion. ,
a man.

,, , ^, , ,
figure, paint, 0. 10. 5.
manly, brave,
simi-
nanimous
C.

most magnanimity
^.,
manly, mag-
adv. with the ut-
adv. man-

,Orest. 916.
liness,
manner.
— masculine
courage

',
fortitude, A. 6. 5. 9.
adv. in
man-
a manly
fully.

,
for
Ion.
men, a dining-room, Herod. 7. 187.
ihog, , a chamber for men, 0.9.5.

,,
, a hall

, ,
«/^^,
^-,
oy, 0, one who expels a just \
not registered as a free
,

,
claimant, Septem, 639. I ex- citizen, Plut. 154. a

-
1.

,, ~.
pel or banish a guilty person, (Ed. T. 100. woman not legitimately espoused uncer- —
,,
, ^,
tain season, Anacr. Ep. 82.

,,
,
.,

, ,,- I
astatue representing a man.
,
make
6, a statuary,

the making of statues,


, ^,
statues,

I render manly, strong, or ro-


. Olym.
cheer,

,,
f.

8. 98.
,
sleep, rouse, It. 9. 6.

I raise

raise



up,

up a person
or
awaken from
refresh the memory,
dejected,
I am

,
f. awakened, roused rouse myself,
bust, O. 5. 4. I act like a man, emblazoned fame, Isthm. 4. 39.
behave with manly firmness, 1 Cor. 16. 30. , ij, to be blamed, censured,
, ov, manful, or avhpi- or accused, At. 2. 8. 5. unimpeachable.
— — — — — — —— —
US
« ,- , ,-, ,,
priv. — adv. blame- — ;, adv. tolerably, to
114

, .
lessly. be endured, to be such as can be tolerated.
Avslw, adv. loosely, carelessly, without re-
,
ov, inexplicable, 4. 3. 8.

,
straint, Arist. Ethic, y. 8. f. I detect I
is protected at large, without care, i. e. is am discovered, found to be, Ion. 1470.

,
— not
,
,
not protected, but is open and accessible,

,
Philoct. 1150.

>, ,, ,
rather
,,, f.
Choeph.
I put upon, lay the
15.
ov, unexplored, untried
able to be refuted, certain, Thuc. 5. 85.
infallible adv. without in-
li-

. , ,
dead on a bier, II. v. 657. fr. ha. quiry or evidence, Plut. 4. 665.
ov, —
unwilling unwelcome, sad, , , unmerciful, ,

, , ,
Herod. 7.

^,
88.

the mind, imagine, Plut.

,,
,, f. —
,
I form a picture, model
9.
f.
583.
f<y, I roll back,
in
Rom.
compassion.
1. 31.

ov (a priv.
illiberality
),
adv. without

illiberal,
adv.

,
, ,
unroll,

.
Orest. 171.

. ,
4. ava,

,
open

for
— wind back my
rolls itself,

yi, ov,
steps, hasten,
Long. 12.

part. pres. of
illiberally, in

, ,
a volume, Ar.
or
a mean manner.
, meanness, Arist. Ethic/3. 7.
1. 6.
f.

14. —
, curl.
I unfold, open

, ,, , , , ,
remiss — devoted, Herod. 2. 108. f. f<y, f.

unguarded adv. remissly, see I draw back, bend a bow — raise a scale —
extract the point of a spear. Imp.
,, fr. inf. also for he tore, plucked up

, ,
),
, ,
go up, return,
you should ascend,
3. sing,
imp. avn'iov for
.
492.
goes, applies to,
I went up, climbed,
(from the form
. 2.
II. .
4. 12.
his own hair, II.
sel to be
ning fast, Med. 1181.
<?,
), , 6, ,
. 77. — haul on shore a ves-

repaired raise the feet as in run-

— («priv.

,, .

,. ,
Od. — destitute of hope

,
146. part. pres. ascending, desperate, 7.
rising sun, II. . 136. — —

,
returning, Od. *.. 332. 9. contraryto expectation, strange, Trach.
1 return to that part 687. —
sws?.wvr&?,adv.unexpectedly,beyond

,, ,, . ,
,
of the discourse, Herod. 7. 239.
unclothed, Od.y.348.ei,
imp. or I
hope.

accessible,
ov, not to be mounted upon, in-
a priv.
bring back word, announce, Pyth. 1. 61. not having a portion, poor,

,
ov,
— . —
.
command nominate— threaten, Plut. 4. 404. not distributed, ,

,,
4. 2.
17. ava,
,., Dem. 1083.
,
,
, ,
II. -/. 56. —
I force back, keep off,
hold back, restrain, E. 7. 1. 21.
I tie on, twist about, Herod. 3. 118.
ANEM02,
mind,

,
eig
vain attempt.
6, the wind, animus, breath,
on the wind, said of a
breath of the

,
fr. ava, ).
adv. above— from above,
wind, the blowing wind, Theo. 25. 168.
the force, impulse of the wind,
,
,from the beginning, from one's ancestors,
Herod. 1. 170.

,,
origin, Polyb. 16. 12. 2.
at first, in their
25. 94.
of winds blowing on all sides, II.
animus.
:, , , ,
the waves
397. h. .

,
ou, affording no passage out, in- or windy,

,
Thuc. stormy exposed to the wind, and conse-

,,
extricable, a, 3. 98.
ou, said of daughters too poor to quently lofty, II. y. 305. Wiov, a sail
marry, unsettled, Dem. 1124. 7. given to the wind.

9. 15.
, , , -.
A^;idr/jy>jTo?,oi/,inexplicable,ineffable,2Cor.
-/\, am
,.
carried by the wind, Jam. 1.6.
sheltering from the wind,

.
Luke
7\,, ,
-, , ,
-/ , ,
14, I ,
.
12. 33.fr.

fill
ou, unutterable,
ou, never-failing,

,
imp.
up again, replenish.
,
,
not likely to astonish,
6,
not liable to be alarmed, undaunted,
1 Pet.
inexhaustible,
1. 8.

. 3. 4.
warm cloak, II. 224.

where the wind, being compressed,


,
a covering.
,
, said of two valleys

as in a throat, harsh-sounding, Pyth. 9. 7.

by the wind, impetuous,


in the wind, hardy,
ov, or
II.
,
. 256. — nursed
rattles

nursed

,. ,,
trepidity,

,
the highest degree of in-
Ay. 6.
without consternation, intrepidly, a
7. adv.
priv.
latile
ov, turning with the wind, vo-
— fleet-winged storm, Anacr. 41 ,^.
hollow like the wind, vain,
-
,
,
ov
sc.
(),
, it is
to be supported,
insufferable, II. a. 573.
false, II.

?., , ,
. 355. — ineffectual, . 474.
adverbially, in vain, Theo. 25. 259.
wind-flower, corn-rose, ane-
—— — — —
115
mone, be produced from the blood
said to
- /, ^,
,
, Ion.

,
ov, unfit,
116
un-

,,,
—adverse, Herod.
,
of Adonis, Theo. 5. 92. expert, E. 1. 6. 4.

,
1. 175.

-,-,
.
flowers of speech fading and insipid, ov, blameless,
—unpunished, Polyb.

,
Luc. 2. 548. Dem. 1417. 12. 35.2.3.
,

,,
6, unimpeded, Arist. Ethic. ov, not liable to envy, not in-
n. 12. adv. without impedi- vidious, free from malignity and scorn, Po-
ment, , lyb. II. 10. 3. — not exposing to hatred,
ov, not to be admitted, impossi-

.), Trach. 1033. most ex-

,
ble, , Luke 17. 1. cusable, Dem. 331. 23.
ov, indelible. , , sc. -, it is not invidious for all men, it is

,
,
, unconvicted (,
ou,
unsifted, unsupported by evidence, Thuc. I.

.
,
21. not brought to a test, untried, 4. 126.
ov, not to be investigated, in-

,
, allowed to all, Thuc. 1. 75.
adv. without being envied.

\,.$
(ava,
I am
^)), f. ,
I stir up.
stimulated, excited, imp.
-

, -, ,
scrutable, Rom. 1 1. 33. , stirred up, provoked, Thuc.

Dem.
', untried, unexamined, a,
50. 16. adv.
2. 21.
f. aor. 1. /-,
,
without examination. I snatch up, convey away, II. . 234. The
ov, not to be found out, un- bees are said to have picked up for Me-

,
.
,
^,
searchable

. , 6,

vast, Thuc. 3. 87.

,
forbearing, meek, 2 Tim. 2. 24.

, ,
,
disposed to bear wrongs,
, , - nander the flowers of the Muses, Anthol.
3. 286.

-, .
ov, wanting a ballast or a ful-
crum, unstable, , Long. 2. 2.

,
ov, unsearchable, Rom. 11. 33. poet, ask again, in-

,
I
, ,
not having a passage out, terrogate, . 508. Od. . 461. Imp.

,
6, II.

Plut. 7. 92.— irremeable,


said of a country for thou didst ask, Theo.

, .,
from which there is no return, Theo. 1 2. 25. 193. what thou askest of
19.

,,,

-
me, II. . 177.
,
,
Long. 4. thoroughly,

,
insensible, c. gen. f. I search, sift

,, ,
shameless having no scrutinize, ava,

,
ov,

,
reason to be ashamed, faultless,

,
2Tim.2.15. not to be scrutinized,
ov,
Av£9r«ipoi,oz/,untouched, entire, Dem. 926.20. sc. you repine for
,

,
not hateful, benign, av- things not to be inquired into, Ion. 255,

.
benignity, serenity i. e. things secret.

,
adv. without grudge or hatred, Plut. 1.241. imp.
, I creep,
,
, ,
get up — crawl back, return, Phcen. 1185.
, ,
,-,
ov, not insidious, candid, fair blush again, 2.

,
f. I 3. 12.

,,, ,
towards each other, Thuc. 3. 37. imp. f. I draw up,

,,
ov, assigned to a possessor con- hoist, Od. . 77. tuckup, draw ashore, He-

ble,
{, ),
trary to the forms of law, Dem. 1135.
unjust, inequita-
too unfair, Thuc. 3. 66.
rod. 9. 97.

1 come
or go back, return
f.

spring
aor. 2.

, unfairness, iniquity, Dem. 845.

- ,. —
from the ground ascend, Od. . 97. — ad-

,
ov, not liable to be called in vance, Hercul. 802. go back over the same
question, blameless, . 2. 1. 9. , subject, repeat, Phcen. 1213.

,, —
tion or censure.
adv. without crimina-

not liable to censure, blame- , , . 251.


,'
\,
I ask, question, again, Od.

/j, the action of loosening, remit-

,,
less,Orest. 920. adv. with-
out reprehension, in safety, A. 7. 6. 26.

, . ting or relaxing
24. 23. —
opp. to

release from chains,Acts
rest, repose,

.
-, ,,
unconsidered, unexamined, 2 Cor. 2. 1 2.

,
,
remiss
2. 4.

. , -,,
Long. 33.
3.— neglected, Polyb. 32. 19. 5.

-, ,
4.
, not intent on business,
ij,

,
adv. inadvertently,

unskilful, undiscern- , ,
f.
,
6, q, having no home or hearth,
a wanderer, II. /. 63. a, hta.
I examine thoroughly, ex-

tort by tortures, Acts 22. 24.


praep. governing the genitive, without,

, .
ij,

, ,
ing, 1. 2. 19. adv. un- sine, without a trial, IT. 7.5.26.
skilfully. — unless, 1. 6. 12. and though, 5.

,
,
-,
rance, opp. to
not subject to controul,
sj, unskilfulness,
Thuc. 5. 7.
igno-

in-
4. 13.
sessing which, 6.
John
without which, without pos-
1.
without your father, without
10. 29,
10. ,
dependent, Thuc. 7. 69. , his assistance or concurrence.
— —— — —

,
.

, . , ,, ,
117 ANT 118
not well placed, incommo- —not heard of before, strange, Hippol.
ov,
dious, Acts 27. 12.
ov,
,,
not under controul
. — not ac-
362.
K. 3. 8.
unwillingness to obev,

,
,,
countable,

,
rod. 3.

\ 80.

, , ,
Thuc.

,.
aor. 2.
3.
without responsibility, with impunity, He-
43.

I find out, Theo.


adv.
disobey, Herod.

in virtue.
f. ,
f. v\aos,

I
I refuse to
1. 115.
advance, proceed, improve
comply with,

He-

,
, ,
30. 9. discover, 2. 9. 3. rod. 7. 1 3, to arrive at the summit of pru-

, , , f.

ill-boding terms, Orest. 1335.


I lament without using dence I am,
7.
avail,
134. being amongst the first in

, ,, . ,, .,
mind, Thuc. 4. 55.

cease, E.
ov,

Imp.
1. 6.
cloudless,

14.
,
,
,
unpledged, irresolute, wavering

I
—hold on, persevere,
Od.

hold up, stop,

\,
. 45.

2.
wealth,

duty, Philem.
it

,
pertains,
it

it is fit,

that which belongs to thee, thy

,
8.
avails nothing.
Ephes.

unmerciful, unrelenting,
5. 4. ooi

2. 10.

,
subj. for
— rise as the sun,

.
may
K.
sustain,
6. 13.
administer
Call.
cruelly,
4. 106.
,
adv. unmercifully,

, ,,
just laws, Od. 111. f. m. will hold myself
r. not exposed to the sun, dark,
ov,

/,
under, sustain, bear, endure, 27. take . opaque, Alect. 855. ,

, ,, ,
persons upon me, entertain, Od. . 13. ov, 6, , without shoes, unshod, x,

,,
sense, aor. 2.

f.
f.

310. lifted up, v. 278. raised up,


aor. 2. m.
3?,
held up, projected, II.
318.
raised for himself, \\..
«5 nearly the same

.
-, a shoe or sandal, Theo. 4. 56.

fierce,
ov, ij, unmilked, Od. /. 439.
ov, not belonging to the day, wild,
inhuman, Hecub. 1078. Wild ani-
/-
,
67. endured, . 430. for mals, as they leave their retreat in the
^g/v, to raise, II. . 301. f. m.

.
, \, ^,
about to endure or sustain, g. 285. oy* jjng-
night to prowl for their prey, may be said
to be animals not of the day but of the

,,, , ,
ffjcgro, Ion. for

could not continue silent.

n. 412.
Imp.
Herod. 8.26,
being silent he could not continue so— he

held up, lifted, II.


aor. 2.inf. for
night,

cate,
,
Dem.
ov, impracticable, intri-
208. ult. ineffectual, Od.
inexhaustible, S. Elect. 168. x,
surmountable, Polyb. 9. 24. 4.
3.—
—'m-
.

,
,
to bear
g. 320.

^,
up against the waves, emerge, Od.
xgiQ/xoc.
, innumerable, Prom. 89. a>

- ,,
I hold up, remove,
the hands, S. 347. rise as the sun.
11. g. 798. raise ov,
natural^ri•, Orest. 620. , -.
not belonging to Vulcan, un-

,
,,
-,
,
170.—

Dem.
,
ov, 6,

1068. ult.
a cousin, nephew, Theo. 22.

*j,

the Attic form of


,
a female cousin
cousinship, consanguinity,

,. mute.
prep, governing the geni-
,

tive only, and is used to express the cor-


respondence between one thing and an-
other when they are exchanged, or when
they act one in opposition to another, ,
,
,
calm, patient, Herod.

new my
f. wc»,
not clamorous under

youth, Heracl. 173. xvx,


not full grown, beardless.
5.
grow up to manhood
27. x,

)1.

evils,

re-
therefore, means substitution, equivalence,
reciprocit} , or opposition, and is rendered

,
r

by for, instead, in the room of, equal to,


against, before, for the sake of.
.
reovhs
481, may they give a fa-

,/,
ov, II.

,
AvYiOot/, ov, anise, dill, a plant used for
food and medicine, Mat. 23. 23.
vour in the room of these things, may they
recompense thee for these things, -
,
Av
, ov, consisting of anise, Theo. 7.63.
ov, not expressive of the hu-
mours and characters of men, said of De- ,
<, II. /. 116, he is in the place
of, equal to, many people, he is himself a
host, Od. . 154, in the place
,,
,
, ,,
mosthenes, Long. 34. 3. of a brother, as, like a brother,
,
. ,
3. 5. 18.
not to be cured, incorrigible,

irreparable evils— inconso-
lable, II. g. 397. x, ;— ^,
adv.
II.. 75, in the place of a suppliant, as a
suppliant
in opposition to me, against me.
II. <?,
481, stand .
incurably — Od. . 115, hold-

, ,
Herod. 8. 28, they defeated them with ir-
reparable loss.
ANHK002,
. —
,
not listening to, dis-
ov, 6,
obedient not having heard of, Mosch. 3.
108. uninformed, Dem. 441. 15. fr. ,
ov, , , not listening to, stubborn
ing his garment in opposition to his eyes,
before his eyes. xv§
wherefore, quare, propterea quod—

Ethic, y. 1
,
in return forwbich,

for the sake of great things,Arist.

composition
I 2
retains its primitive
,
110

A
— ,
, ,,
— — — — —

,

120

,
sense of equivalent, like opposite, against an engagement in which

,,
it),


-,
.
in return, in one's turn, on one's part. a party of horse run one against another.
aor. 2. AvtitrYif&t, aor. 2. — f. -/ —

,,
I choose in the place of another, prefer
obtain a crown, Hecub. 660.
an active sense, I stand against,
in

oppose, resist render ineffectual by resist-

,,
,
ov, , a rival, Ion. 606.

turn, Hecub. 275.


,
I
I rival, cope with, E. 6.2.1 6.

,
cling to, supplicate in my
j
,
,
ing, Rom. 12. 2.

,.
4. 15.
ov,

resist a law-give?-, rebel
against— resist evil, withstand, defeat, 2 Tim.

yellow-flowered, Hecub. 471.

-
verbal of to be laid] a collector of poetical

claimed,
ov,

hold of in opposition to another, to be beauties


,
?-,
ov, 6, ij,

I gather flowers
sj, a collection of flowers,
av~

^'
h.

,
-, sc. ,/,
he dared to say that anthology.
the command of the sea ought to be claim- {, ,),
[,
^,.
ed by them, Thuc. 1. 93.
uvfethjcw, I draw, pull against,
reciprocal assent, mutually
I give
agree or stipulate, Dem. 894. 26. praise —
, . ,,
so as to counteract another, Plut. 9. 92. in turn, Luke 2. 38.

-,
,,
02, ,
for
the upper part of a plant
to,
a gift, Theo. Ep.

, , 13. opposition, perf. pass,

,,
armed against, O. 8. 12.
I arm myself in my turn or in
has been

,
or herb, a flower, bloom, bud. imp. I station a fleet in
a blade of grass, Jam. 1. 10. a crown or


,,
front of, or against, Thuc. 2. 86.

.
garland made of flowers the flower of age,
Pyth. 4. 281. —the flower of horses, i.e.
those which carried the palm, Olym. 2. 91.


a flower of song, a song of triumph, 9. 74.
a flower offire, a spark, Prom. 7. flower —
,
, , cinders,
ov, 6, wine which smells of flow-
ers, spiced, rich,

,
John
•,
,
wine, Plutus, 807.
alive coal, Rom. 12. 20.
6,

a heap of burning coals, live


18. 18. II. /. 213.

,
of the body, colour, complexion, 23. splen- reduce to cinders, perf.

,
f. I

,
dour, x\tjc, bloom of the sea, i. e. part. pass, burnt to ashes,

,,
purple flower of an army.
,
,,
Prom. 380.

, ,, 7], a hornet, Nub.


on, ov, flower}', e&iyf&s- 9. 44.
adverbially, marked or ena-
02,,,, a hornet's nest, Vesp.1075.

,
ov,
— —
,
melled with flowers, A. 5. 4. 18. ij,man mankind man

,,
,,,, ,
,
the herb gith. A. 5. 4. 18. in his several relations, i. e. husband, 1 Cor.

,, ,
, flowery, 11. -. 885.
flower-like, flowery.
6, the chin where grows the
7. 1.

12. 26.
— master, Mat.
— a person.
10. 36, — slave,

go out among
Luke

,
At. 1. 1. 14, they should

,beard, the flower of manhood, U.

. . |
men, i. e. in public.

,
501. ov, 6, a man-pleaser, a flat-
'- 57,

,
|

-, , , ov, o, an ear of corn, Ephes.


^-,
, ,
terer, parasite, 6. 6.

,
\

,
11. v. 227.— the stall Theo. 1. 52. . ov, Ion. belonging
— human
|

f. ,, p. />•/, m. Att. ! to or of man affairs, imperfect,


by inserting o, I bring forth flow- Herod. 1. 5. 32. 207. adv.
—flourish, —grow

, ,,
ers or blossoms I bloom man -like, after the manner of men, Thuc.
like a flower in wealth or fame, prosper, 3. 40. —by human means, 5. 103.
Hecub. 1210. Thuc. 1. 19.— shine, glitter, live among men, Arist. Ethic.
. j

,
6. 4. 1. It is used to express blood) . 8.

,
gently oozing from a wound as a flower rt , ov, c. like, suitable, to
— not exceeding the nature or rank of
j

gradually unfolds to the eye, II. 266. . man

— ,,
j

ov, opposite to the sun, brilliant like 1 man, Pint. 8. 149. adv. man-
like, conformably to human nature.

,,,
the sun, Ion. 1550. fat

,
|

— )<r, x, ov n, ov, flowery, florid r ov, of man, human, opp. to


t ,

,
man-
/,
xvOtipZ;, adv. flower-like, in a florid

divine peculiar to man, 4.3.14.

, , ,,
ner things in full bloom, in re-
pute, and net yet decayed, 1.6. 19. .
hamanfault, venial human things, com-
mon, ordinary, human af-

, ,.
,Thuc.
f.

Ion. 890. aor.

AuO-t7rvrew>.
I cause to bloom, embellish,

to
4. 19.
make a

I
I
1.

t\,
am

ride agatnrt,
ov,
adorned, Anacr. 53.
conquered. Inf.
reciprocal concession,

flowery,
1*. .
Od. /.

20.
8 4.
/-
, ,
, *>
ov,
,
fairs, 1. 3. 4.

human
ings of a

, a little
adv. like a man.

toe,
to bear
things like a man, or with the feel-
man.

man, manikin, Plut.


ov, ,
}
4. 16.
*v, bear-
— —— — —

,
121

,
,
ing
2. 86.
the human shape

, , human
,
I sacrifice
6, ,a
a
or form,

-
sacrifice.
man-slayer
human being,
, Herod.

,
,
$.
Hecub.
ANIHMI,
Ion.
xvuvxi, part,
AN
I remit, relax,
they suffer,
remitting, giving up,
Ephes. 6. 6. to give up oneself to sport, in-
dulge in, 2. 173. imp. xvtnv, they
I

permit, aviiht,
Herod. 2. 36. inf.
122

, .,.,
260. did not relax, II. 1. 4. 21. aor. 2. xvnv, con-

,
,
Arist. Ethic, . S.
one who speaks of men,

ee^6J57o<p£/7£,so£,assuming the nature of man,


born like men, Herod. 1.131. . , , , traction of
.
they opened, II.
537. sub. ccvyi, may give me up, resign,
relinquish me, Theo. ll.*23. optat.
or avnn, II. .
34, may relinquish or leave,

),
, . .
fice, Hecub. 259.
, a man-eater, cannibal.
6, r„

a?,the eating of human flesh.


f. ), I offer human sacri-
inf.

,
, ,,,,, contr. of
release, A. 7. 6. 21. part,
on, stimulated, II. e. 761.
to dismiss,

by transp.
I relax myself, am relaxed, am re-
having put

-,
, . - ,
I bring under trial in return, re-

, ,
criminate, Thuc. 3. 70.

,
,
I meet in return, encounter,
, leased, am remiss.
II. . 80.
slaughter, sacrificing them, Od.
having opened,
turning up goats for

)
300. .

, , . ,,, ,,
reason with, Long. 18. (from xvx, or the

,,
f.

,,
.
-
, , ,
, a pro-consul

,, ,
I am a pro-consul, Acts 18. 12.

T£6),assist, supply in
swear in opposition, invali-
I
return ,A .E./. 1 0.
same in sense with
optat.
f. 209. aor. 1. ind.
gated, II. s. 882.
aor. 1 or
stir up, induce, II.
or xvsr^s, insti-
for
Heb. 13. 5, I will not leave, forsake thee,
.

date by a contrary oath, Dem. 1 1 74. 8. aor. l.pass. was released, Acts 16. 26.
),
,my
, ,
IQJ-yiO). on.
part, co-operate, Hipp. 999.
return, Herod.
f.

.
-, 1
3. 133.
wound
the body or mind,
f. yiooj,

— serve
I act
in
for xvx
thou givest her up to her own
wishes, humourest, II. . 880. fr. xvx,

Dor.
straight up, Od. .4. 377.
unconquered, in-
.

, ,, -,
priv.

,
), ,
,
grieve, sadden, afflict, Od. v. 178. from
to heal, on the same principle as
negotium, business, is from nee, otium, no

,,
vincible,
f.
Theo. 22. 111. K. 1. 17. ,
I draw up water with a

bucket or thong, buoy up, A. 4. 2. 6.

,
leisure; or disease, no ease, mount a horse, ride upon, Ion. 41.

, , ,
presence, aor. .
Od. /. 334, no one is grieved

by thee present no one feels sad in thy
1. part, pass, wor-
mount on
ov,
aor. 2.
wings,
unwashed,
fly aloft,
II.

Iphig. T. 843.
. 266. ,
I

ried, disgusted,

, , , , .
Od. x.
.
133.
291, there
ert
a na-
having the feet unwashed,
scil. the priests of Jupiter, who always slept

,
II. is

. ,

, ,
return, f. m.
,,
tural desire or longing in every man when
from home, that when distressed he should
for and
on the ground, U.

just, . 2. 2. 10.
235.
ov, unequally divided, unequal, un-

adv. unequally,
this for

,,, ,,,
, ,
Ionic form of
remedy, Herod.

am
f.
7. 236.
sorrow or solicitude,
I feel
anxious about, II. . 300. Imp.
from the
they will heal, or
unjustly,
752. 17.
f.

, I
vj,
render unequal.
he was unjust, Dem.

unequal division, partial

-•, -—-, ,
union, Thuc. 8. 87.
.
for

,
721.

^
xvtx, or

they were grieved, harassed,-^.
grieve, afflict transitively, Od. . 323.

ness, vexation, Od. n• 192.


,
, Ion, xvm, sorrow, sad-
xvtnv, from
/^i,

sleep,
aor. 2.
I
ov, unequal

cause to rise, raise up raise


in

wake, rouse— raise a wild beast


number,
f.


S.
per.

, ,,
said of Scylla, a cause of distress against

,
which there is no remedy, ,. 223.

, ,
,
.
or
1. 4. 14.
ov, grievous, vexatious,
adv. sadly, etuiygees-
more irksome, more sad, Od.
ov, not to be healed, wretched,
190. .
-,
from


-,
restore,

. <?, ,— ,, -,
risen up,
its den, start
basis, overthrow, subvert
build, erect

Herod.
— raise

Ion. for
3. 62. part,

,
a house from its
up a trophy,
expect, Polyb. 29. 11. 10.
raise

having risen up against, fallen


have
for

,4. adverbially,

-,
or hopeless, Dein. 332. 21.

bour, II. 2. 1. 14.


to be incurable

I shout, exclaim, Apoll. 2. 270.

, unsteady, Dem. 786. , ^.


not caused to sweat by
ov,
, —
without sweat, without trouble, or labour.
adv. , ,,
, -, la-
upon,

trace, ^,
3. 66.
raise myself, rise
racl. 59.
477. 23.

f.

f.
I

II.
I
— recover— remove,
raise again, renew
inf.

ask again, Hipp. 92.


go
.

in the steps of another,
1 92.
He-
restore, Dem.
I
— ——— — — — —— ——

,
123 124

,
,
,,
, ,, ,
,
country, ascent, A.
ou,
tj, an expedition into a higher

lament, bewail,
I
2. 1. 1. ctvci,
pathless, inaccessible,
5. 1. 3. .
.. ,
which the enemies of the Gospel endea-
voured to undermine it by setting aside its
truth, and confounding the natural distinc-
tion between virtue and vice, 2 Thess. 2. 7.

,
a, vow, unwise, Od. . 270. 2 Cor.

,
6. 14.
ou, without thought, unwise, impru- ov, o, tj, without eyes, blind, a,

, ,.
dent, opp. to oi the Philoct. 877.

,
senseless multitude, Ajax, 162. unequal, unlike,
ov, 3. 8. 4.

, ,, -
adv. unwisely, absurdly, rashly, K. 3. 8. adv. unequally, A. 7. 7. 29,

, ,
, , ,,
,
f.

gate, imp.

. ,. ,
folly, madness, 2 Tim. 2. 9. '
|&»,

',
,
')
I open open a
he could not have
opened, was not able to open, II. f. 178.
they threw open for, Ion. for

»,

achest,
I

,, ,
\>,
am

allow,
unequal to, not on an equality with

per.
acknowledged, Dem. 254.
dissimilar, A. E.
7„ inequality, Arist.
f.

,
(st^ii,

10.
/.

I
1. —
Ethic,
I
have been
.
assent,
8.

,
uncovered, II. ar. 221. aor. 1. for disagreement, Plut. 7. 768.

,
I opened, Anacr. 3. open a way, ov,unprofitable, useless, unhappy,
cut, cleave, Pyth. 5. 118. open a treasure, — Orest. 507. adverbially, unpro-

, ,
1

, ,.

, ', ,
disclose, Ion. 923. it is neces- fitably, to no purpose, Hecub. 766.
sary to
imp.
,
open, must unfold
was opened, II. 809. . senseless
contr.
— obdurate,
II.

,
441.
ov, 6,

.
,
, .
thoughtless,

, an opening, Ephes. 6. 19. a furious bird of the eagle


',
Avothicj,f. wot, I swell up kind, Od. a. 320. it is the Heb. HDJi*.
Damm. 2821, takes it to he the neut. plur.

,,. ,
swell as the sea by the luind, Hipp. 1210.
swell with passion or inflammation. of taken adverbially, invisibly,
.
, ,
,
,

, ,
unsuitable, inappropriate, Long. unrecognised,
\.
43.
.1.

AN0IK02, an
,
exile, Herod. 3. 145. u,
ov,
f. ,unarmed, unmanned,
again, set upright
I raise

,

,
,
, .,,
remove my

,
f.
habitation, rebuild.
yaa, I rebuild, repair, Acts 1 5. 1 6.
ov, not fit to be set forth in a
house, irregular, Long. 33. 5.
ov, not to be pitied,
a tear not unpitied, Iphig. T. 227.
,
rebuild, Acts 15. 16. Thuc. 6. 88.
rescue, CEd. T. 46.
myself upright, Luke 13. 13.

ov,
,,
restore,
I raise

correction,
harbourless.
marriage in which the anchor of Hymen
a
amendment.

merciless, Thesm. 103I.Troad. 782.


.
,
cannot be cast, an unlawful marriage, CEd.
adv. without pity, i. e. without
being buried, (Ed. T. 180.
, ,
. \, ',
T. 422.
SOgOl
,
f.

— rise up
I rise,

. —.
spring up, start up,

,,
a, ov, to be related II. a. 248. as the sun gush forth
I must recur there, return in mind to that as a fountain, ava,
place, Her. F. 1221.

, ,
unroofed, lofty,
ov, ,

,
unhappy, unfortunate, soar aloft, Equit. 1344.
I

.
q, misfortune, wretchedness, Hes. ?. 319.
(>, ov, 6, i], unholy, impious, impure.
This epithet is given to one who acts con-

,
ov, undestroyed, saved
from destruction, 761.
II. v. , trary to a sense of honour, or to the feel-

\,
,
ings of human nature. He is who

,
f. |<y, Ishout from grief or joy,
S. Elect. 750. — supplicate, Iphig. T. 1337. betrays his trust or abuses the confidence
I lament, Thuc. 8. 81. aor. 1. of others, Ay. II. 4. who acts with cruelty
. .

, ,., ,
m. loudly bewailed, 7. 3. 5. towards a friend or a stranger, 4. 6. 2.

Rhet., ,
I

,,
ava,
3. 11. 5. fr.
make equal, perf. pass. inf.
the act of equalizing, Arist.

not subject to law— law-


',
A man when impious towards the gods is
,; when unjust towards man he is
and when cruel or unjust to-
wards his own relations adv. con-

, , ,
less, sinful, living without the law of Moses,
1 Cor. 9. 21.—-/

, -, ?,
apostates from, the law.
whichis against law, violence—
violators of, or
that
adv.
trary to nature, nefariously slain, E. El. 677.

or
ov, 6, q, a nefarious doer.
ov, free from disease,
sound, healthy, Thuc. 2. 49.
-,
,without a law, Rom. 2. 13.
verbially, Iphig. A. 399, unlawfully.
,
, a deed contrary to the law of
God, impiety, sin— a deed contrary to the
laws of men, injustice, violence, rapine.
ad-

,
from returning, incapable of returning.

caused them all not to return,


,
ov, 6, tj, prevented

Od. . 182, he

ov, without ears, deaf, a priv.


, .

At. 1. 2. 44. the antichristian system by or , an ear, Theo. Ep. 4.

,
.

,,
125

,,
,,
Ion.
,,,
incapable of admoni-
tion, incorrigible, Dem. 1477. 14.

a weapon in hand, and thus it differs from


unwounded by a missile weapon.
not wounded by

-,, ,
other, Col. 1. 24.
I set
ANT
one against another, Dem. 182. 22. sup-

-,
ply what is defective on the part of an-

myself against,

,

126

resist,

,
Trach. 448.

,,
II. . 540.

-, p. m. plup.
, (-)
truce, Polyb. 2. 6. 5.
a suspension of arms,

forbearance.
tear asunder, Pyth. 4. 49.
ANTA, preposition or adverb, governing
the genitive, against, in front of, II. v. 75.

,
,
, ),
xvtxvqiiv, rose

Long. 34.

-,, &,
f.

4.

ov,
up over against, Thuc. 2. 75.
|, open the eyes against, face,

.
stretch out, Call. 1.30.
equivalent, 2. 10. 3.

,
— over and against, directly opposite. Ssoiai f. I claim in return, demand

,
-), ,
a. 630, directly is like the gods,
like them to the face, very like,
Nem. 6. 46, directly to hit the mark.
contradict, Ran. 1104. -,
-,,
an equivalent, Thuc. 6. 16.
-{), demand in return,
exhibit in turn, 2. 2. 22.
Thuc. 3. 58.

.
-,-,
f. I deliver up in turn, 3.

-,
repay a favour— punish, Rom. 12. 9.
I buy one thing for another,
purchase in return, A. 1.5. 5. «/,,,
3. 26.
a recompense, Luke 14. 12.

,,
I contend against, resist, c&z/T«*7rodotf/£,£a?,retribution,reward,Col.3.22.
Heb. 12. 4.
tagonist, adversary,
-,),
up a hand
f. aor. 1.
,,a
Troad. 1006.

or a weapon against an-


, -,
rival, an-

contradict,
I give an answer

Rom.
answer
the arguments or accusations of another,
11. 12.
I slay in return,

him who

,
I lift kill

,
other,
Polyb. 15.

, \, , ,
,,
683.

site,

I raise
7. 8. —
rise against, Plut. 2. 252.
, ov, and
adverse— propitious, Apoll.

Herod. 3. 144. make war upon,

myself against, oppose, Luc.

,
1.
oppo-
1140.
2.

, ,
,, ^,
Hecub. 262.
killed another,
xvrxi^opxi, or xvrxnqo- Av T-w7ro^u^Qocuoj,receiye'm return,Dem.47 1
inf.
in return, slay the slayer, Ion.

^,
after having caused
aor. he perished
another to perish, E.
I destroy
1328.— xv-

,
a direct blow, i. e. a blow Supp. 743.
directly levelled at a vital part, Andr. 841. break wind Nub. 202.

,
I at,
demand

,
I in return, or in the I show in reply, demonstrate

, -,,
room. avri,

,, ,. , ^,
,
Thuc.
6, a species of whales with-

out a spine, Herod. 4. 53.

-^., f. hear in return, Hec. 321.


3. 19. in opposition, Thuc. 3. 38.
in opposition, un-
I lay hold
dertake war against, c. gen. Herod. 7. 138.
. ov, belonging to the antarctic

,,,
I

,
-,
change one thing for another. Sxuxrov

,
Phcen. 1627, shall receive
circle, antarctic.

$,
\,
embrace in return,
reflecting the rays, refulgent.
. 1. 3. 3.

,
death in return, expiate with death. f. the rays of the
I reflect

-,
,
uvrxJChxypx, a thing given in lieu of
another,an equivalent, ransom, Mat. 1 6. 26.
I exchange words for words,
sun.

tering point.

-), ,
Orest. 1519, reflects
slaughter, menaces slaughter with its glit-

answer— recompense, Theo.


, 6, one who gives
24. 71.
in return or
, I
,,
reflected light, K. 5. 18.
speak in return, S. Elect. 1 507.

-,,,
,,
inrecompense, Call. 4. 52. f. -), Ion. f. I go against,

-,,,
-,
I defend myself in return,
avenge myself for an injury, Thuc. 4. 19.
I cause to mount in turn, or
force to climb in front, E. 3. 2. 12.
meet, encounter,

II. y\. 158. aor. 1. -,


am
present at go to
meet so as to share, partake of, engage in,

327, you met the sight, happened to see



Od. .

E. 1. 1. 3. aor. 2. I put to
I set sail against,
-, ,
receive from, obtain, c. gen. Herod. 1. 114.
f. aor. 1. xvryxxax, I liken
sea in opposition to the enemy.
-),
on the other hand, Vespae, 1 302.
Aur-ocuxiQsoj,ltake away in turn, refute, Plut.

,, ,
I register one name in lieu of

,
6. 72. balance favours received against another, substitute, 792. 3. Dem.

-),
losses sustained, cancel, Dem. 304. 1 2.
I destroy in return, cause

-,,
return,
f. \), I accuse or inculpate in

Dem. 1012. 17.

-,,
death for death, Orest. 1 ] 65.

-), wait in my turn, Thuc. 3. 12.


-,
I contradict, Acts 4. 14.— refuse

to acquiesce in —
reply to, Antig. 1065.

-',
aor. .
stop up in my turn, E. 2. 4. 8.
f. ,
I fill or

I fill up by balancing
-,
Avr
I ask in return, Herod. 1. 129.
f. *|, introduce in the room.

xvrswwTxt,havebeen imported,Dem. 1 21.6,


— — . — I

-,
127
,
-^,,
A 128

.
bring in a law in the room of
I loving he loved in return
is

,
-,,
another, substitute, Dem. 486. 24. rival in love, o, a rival.

-,, , ,
f. -, I cut, knock out in re- I earn for myself by serving
turn, Dem. 744. 13.
-, ,—
one who served me, Leon. Al. 34.

,
f. I send out against, I f. I prop by counter-pres-

-7\, ,
dispatch a commander; E. 4. 8. 25. sure, E. 5. 2. 2. press the heel against the

-,
4. IS.
f. I sail out against, Thuc. ground, tread, Phiioct. 1403. press in re-

,
^, ,
turn, resist, M. Supp. 702.

,,
,, run out against the enemy
I
pate by a rapid march, E. 4. 3. 10.

-, for
put forth Apoll. 2. 44. springup,Septem,54 1
,

f. «<£, I act in concert with


I
aor. 2.

cause to rise up
cti/riffci&oi-
— antici-
-•/, ,
^,
,
{,
counter-pressure, Pint. 7. 366.
adverse, opposite, Phcen. 761.
6, an antagonist, Septem, 289.

jj, any thing that supports or


resists by counter-pressure, such as a prop,
buttress, K. 10. 7. —
rafters extending from

-,
one country by invading another, E. 3. 5.

,
4. invade in turn, Polyb. 5. 96. 3.
f. I cause to embark in
the room of another, Thuc. 7. 13.
-.',
the beak to the ribs of a ship, both within

, ,
and without, for the purpose of strength-
ening it against attack, Thuc. 7. 36.
the bits, ?|
xv-
Rhe- /^,—
-, I fill in return, fill by way of

remuneration, A. 4. 5. 20.

,
sus, 785, they snorted at the bits, i. e. they
struggled against the bits with snorting and

-, ^,
,
I make a show in opposition, terror.

-,,
oppose, resist, Polyb. 18. 11. 12. or or ,,
,
f. I

,
&, , ^- ,
f.

port in the room,


AurffgXflM/iii!), I sally

/, inf.
forth against, plup. m.
out against, E. 4. 5. 10.
,,
I lead out against
3. 2. . ex-

forth against.
I march

out, sally
marched
gainsay,

-,
-,
Trach. 1200.

-,.,,
I

aor.
draw, procure for money, Thecg. 77.
Ay
1. inf.
shall

ask in return, ask again.


m.
be said against,

ask in return, Dem. 386.23.


I

-, .
6ov, I

-, -,
go out against,
aor. 2.
6. 3. pay a favour, At.
f.

,
I benefit in return, re-
2. 6. 4.

,
f. >jG-a, I praise in return, ap- , disposed to favour or

),, ,
plaud those who applaud,
f.
8. 3. 19.
',
I conduct a fleet,
.
sail
oblige in return, Arist. Ethic,
f. wo, I
.
.
cherish good-will in re-
3.

-,, ^^»,
/, -, , ,
,
,
against, Thuc. 4. 25. turn, 8. 3. 19.

-,
:,
imp.
against, oppose, Thuc.
plup. m.
8. 104.

.
I lead out

I sally imp.

f.

turn a favour, A. 5. 5. 10.


f.
I do good
in return, re-

I hold
forth,

-,
march out against, 3. 3. 15.
go
against hold out against an enemy, sus-

,
,,
aor. 2. I tain, resist, Persa?, 41 1.— hold out against
out, inarch against, Thuc. 4. 131. labour, endure, support, opp. to to

-,
,1. 34.
lay counter-snares,

I write upon in the room of


what was erased, Dem. 615. ult.
write my own name in the
-
Thuc. sink

sue, .
— hold
under
claim, seek — hold
2. 2. 15.
to a thing as
to virtue, cultivate,

hold myself against withhold myself, abs-




f.
my own,
pur-
I

-,
I tain from cling, adhere to, c. gen. Mat.
room of my adversary, I write my name on 6. 24. Nem. 1. 50. undertake the cause —
-},
,-
a trophy,i. e. claim the victory, Polyb. 18. 17. of, help, 1 Thess. 5. 14.
,,
-, f. £co, exhibit in opposition,

prove myself the reverse,

-,
. 1. 12.
-, ,
adv. before, directly, II. x. 187.
Wke to theface, quite like,%.240.
i&oLh-/\ cl'jtyi'j,

-, .
desire in return, Dor. I sound in
, to be sought in return, 2. 6. 28.
aid in return, E. 4. 6. 3.
f.

return, resound, Alcest. 125.


,,
equal to a man, courage-
/-
-?$
in opposition,
I take care in return, mind

5. 1 . ,
ous, epithet of an Amazon,
Olym. 12. 13, a battle in which man
, /.
,
9.

-,
.

-, , - ,
- ,
I too attack, E.
3 I lead out an
4. 8. 33.
army against,
, >
opposed man, a furious battle,
go against another so as to

,
f.

I raise a wall against, meet him, .meet a friend, partake of, c. ace.

-,
1.
, , ,,
129.
I
fortified against,

6, I place, send a letter in return, Thuc.


love in return, 2.
imp.
Thuc.

S. 3.
1. 141.

xv-
part,

v. 290. inf.
II. v. 215. aor.
for
sharing, aor.
might meet,

1,
contr. of xv-

part,
hit,
for
1.optat. Mo\. xv-
reach, c. gen, II.
to share in,
for xv
— — — — I

,
,
129
,
,^, , ANT ANT 130

,
,
Isthm.

, ,
»,
,
,
,,
with,'Nem.
,
take, encounter,

,
having shared, indulging
6. 21.
let

Tiuafc, ye meet, are present at, U.


f.

101. 1.
imperat.
them meet an

Dor.

I shout, humopposite, Theo. Ep. 4.


II. -. 643.

I
in, c. dat.

office,

.
meet, unite
for ay-
under-
-
62.
ov, 6,
adversary, Mat.
f. , .
person in a law-suit,

Helen. 158. remunerate,


,
f.
tj,

5.
I
an opponent at law, an
25.
litigate with,

a counter-gift, Arist. Ethic. . 2.


Ionic form of or av-
I
.
4. 4. 8.
oppose a

give in return,
5. 4. 15.

^,
sist,

&,
aor. 2. I go against, re-
Dem. 290. 26. Herod. 3. 72.
', aor.
, I place myself opposite, pitch
a camp, encamp in front of the adverse

,
, ,
f. throw 2. I party, Herod. 5. 1.
against, oppose — hurl in return — encounter f. I seek one who seeks me,
— oppose

,,
era enemy in words, dispute, con- mutually inquire, O. S. 23.
trovert, c. ace. Luke 24. 17. ov, 6, i], equal to a god, godlike,
/,, ov, exerting force
against force, noble, Od. y. 114.
,.
violent or
adv. forcibly,
violently, in open defiance, I!, a. 278.

/,
Aj/~/SA5i^7vy,injurein return,Arist.Ethic.f. J 1.
/.
,
,. ,,
mutually honour,
f. I respect in return,
1. 4. 18.
run against, Herod. 5. 22.
/,
-/,
, ,,
, placed against or in opposition.
I look directly in the face,
,,
ov,
f. -d

I face, brave, c. dat. At. 4. 7. 9. opposition dispute, cavil, —


tog, a reciprocal glance, such as that of a 1 Tim. 6. 20. antithesis.
., ,,

,
lover, 1. 35. ov, to, scii. in front of the
Ayr/So^, shout in return
f.

cry of another, Bion. 1. 39.


I — echo the door, Od. . 159. §.
Ion. ,-
/, ,
A;/r/So<^ia,succourinreturn,c.dat.Thuc.7.58. ,, I rest opposite the enemy, encamp

, , ,-,
,, ,
f. I come against, meet in front of, Thuc. 1. 30. Herod. 5. 1.

,
,
meet an enemy, encounter
aid
.

overtake, Od. . 271.

—meet a friend,
— am present at,
f.

place myself against another,


I

aor. 2.

,, ,
87. I entreat, Plutus, 103. oppose, Hen. 12. 4. draw up an army in
, . —

,
encounter, en- front of the enemy, 1. 6. 19. I appoint
treaty, Thuc. 7. 75. Plat. Dial. 109. a persori in the room of another, substitute,
-, to oppose
have a contrary opi-

,
f. I Polyb. 22. 15.

,
nion — controvert, myself to, Ittq. 7. 5.
, IT. 4. 3. 3.

,
write back, write in re-
f. I f. invite in return, Luke
turn, I bring an action 14. 12.
against a person in return, retort an accu- ', I exchange, pur-

-
f.

,,
sation, Dem. 1044. 5. chase in the room of, Plut. 10. 390.—
,
a rescript a law-suit by — conciliate, reconcile, Polyb. 15. 20.

^,,,,
which a person claimed relationship to such
and such family recrimination, Nub. 472. —
6, a notary whose office
was to keep a counter-part of the accounts
for, c.
give in exchange, barter
gen. Dem. 273. 23.
I

I order in return, Thuc. 1. 128.


camp op-

,.
I lie against-, pitch a

,
— oppose,
,!
of the or general receivers, to posite, correspond, Gal. 5. 17.

,, ,
prevent peculation. am adverse. the adversary,

,, , , ,
in return,
lend in return, Arist. Ethic. /. 2.
Attrihtvrvog, ov, a vice-president at a feast.

.
f.

4. 2. 11.
I salute, embrace
Luke 21.1 5.
Arist. Rhet.
ov,
1.

,
,
7. 18.'
that which serves for an
incentive or stimulus, Eum. 130.
conversely,

,,
,, ,
I look upon, face with steady f. I feel affection for in re-

,,. ,,, .
eyes, Hercul. F. 163. turn, Ion. 731, I ho-

inf.
receive in return.
f.

I cross over
to an enemy instead of his crossing to me,
I
--,
nour thee for thy attention to
f.

ov, to,
§*», I proclaim in return.
the fore-part of the leg
my father.

Ay. — the shank or shin-bone, .


1. 8.

,— 2. 3. 8.

, ,
accuse in return, A.R. 3. 15. f. Icut by re-acting on a
place myself in opposition, thing— intersect impede by opposing a

,am
&,, disaffected, 2 Tim. 2. 25. resist, Long. 1 7.

repay, Hec. 27

property, O.
AiiTtZoTou, ov,
,, 7. 3.
J.

recompense, exchange of
see Pot. A. G. 1. 85.
a remedy, antidote.
, I give in return,
keen front, E. 2.
, , intersection —
f.

against, frustrate
occur, Dem.
,
maintain on

294.
3.

p.
1 7.

I
my
dash
by an adverse accident
20.— interrupt, Plut. 9. 10.
interstice.
part, ah. 98.
,
131
, ,^,

ANT
— —

.
, , ANT
. ————
132

,
dashing against, collision. I learn one thing instead of
,,, rarely adv. or a praep. c. another, aor. having

^,
2. part,

,
gen. directly opposite, in front, in a straight learnt better or otherwise, Vesp. 1 444.
— against,

,,
line II. 3•. 301.— from one side to bear testimony against, Luc.
I

the other, throughout, sr. 116. in direct — 3. 119. I summon one to


terms, openly, Choeph. 1 90. bear testimony in my favour, Luc. 3. 450.
,

,
avenging the murder, in ven- draw to myself against an-
geance for the murder, Eum. 467.
,,,other, pull backwards and forwards.

,, ,—
for another
7. 880.
f. acquire in turn,
obtain an equivalent, recover, Thuc. 1. 70.
q, the acquiring of one thing
recovery of a property, Plat.

',, ,
,, sure,
I transform myself into the
room of thepersonofwhomIspoke,Long.27.

measure
f. -, I give
in return,
, front against
measure for mea-
Mat. 7. 2.
Ay.2.
, a figure of speech by which
front, 1 2.

,
AvTihxy%xva, aor. 2. obtain
the room, Dem. 974.
kt\v,

\,
to obtain a new trial,
14.

tence being by a just plea laid aside. This

,,,
action was called cfi/r;A)9^5-.seeRob.A.G. 72.
x^Tihxy^iv li-
a former sen-
,, one thing is changed or substituted for an-
other, Long. 23.

son for another, Long. 26.


,
a substitution of one per-

, ,, ,
&, •/, - ,
,,
or I lay hold of
a thing on the opposite side so as to bear
apart of its weight, bear my sh are, Orest. 451.
\1, aor. 2.
f.
ter-plot, Polyb.


ov,
1
I
6.
contrive against, coun-
30. E. 5. 2. 5.
made in imitation, Thesm.
I make after a model.
17.
xv-

,
I seize in turn, take one thing in the s&s, aj, the action of copying
room of another I take
,,
after a

,, ,,
model, emulation, Thuc. 7. 77.

,

hold for myself claim, usurp restrain, — oy,o,arecompense, M. Snpp.285.

curb take hold of a thing to carry it, un- reward, wages, Rom. 1. 27.

dertake take hold of a person -when weak aj, a corresponding portion,

.
,
or falling, succour, support, Acts 20. 35. c. mutual share, Dem. 946. pen. fr.

gen. —I re-act on an object by means of my the reverse of a song, not in


ov,

-,
eyes, perceive, Luc. 1. 779. Thuc. 7. 66.
take hold for my use, partake, 1 Tim. 6. 2.
unison with gladness, sad, woeful, Med.
1 176.— a substitute to soothe in the room

ourselves engage in our


—must restrain, c. gen.
ctvTih.Yi'^ /,

mane of a horse,
,,
5. 7.
,
must be taken in hand, we must

.—
affairs,
.
,,', a handle, a
thing to lay hold of when actingen an object,

help,relief, 1 Cor.
Dem.
8. 8.
9. 12.

,
,
of sleep, Agam. 17.

to a model
I build a ship in conformity

build in a manner most secure
against an attack, Thuc.
ov, contr. ,,
grain, cross-grained, adverse, Apoll. 2.79.
7. 62.
planed across the
.

,
— am

},
1 2. 28. perception reprehension— impe- discordant, Olym. 13. 47.
diment, embarrassment, Plut. 4. 42. discord, Arist. Ethic. . 1.
f. \p&9 I reflect a light, shine, K. ANT 1 02, a, ov, adverse, opposite. But it

5. 1 8. —
kindle a flame so as to answer an- must be rendered often in the sense of an

,
other, Agam. 302.
speak in return, an-
f. |<y, I
,
adverb or preposition,

,
front, in the presence, before,

,
c. gen. against, in
II. 185..

, , ,
swer, (Ed. T. 408.— speak against, gainsay, that which is against, the front,

, oppose in debate,
ov,
6. 2. 9. .
disputed, contested,Thuc.4.92.
those opposite, the enemy
adverbially, against, in opposition, II. ex.. 230.

,
go
ov,

,contradictory, Helen. 1156. too en, f. aor. 1. I

, ,
,
f.

,
Ion. ewjrAoy/i?,
Antig. 383.
I contradict,
contradic-
tion, debate, controversy, Herod. 9. 87.
Heb. 7. 7.
,
against, imp.
dat. Herod. 4. 1

Ai/r/o5"oiTfiy,Istandopposite,Philoct.640.?-i5i«.

,, , the capital of Syria


they resisted,

-
c.

,
, , ,
,
argue against, E. 6. 9. 24.
n, on, capable of contradicting,
qualified to dispute, Nubes, 1175.

\1?), ,
6, Equit. 1044, lion-like man.
6,

feminate, Pallad. 49.


,),
,,
an inhabitant of Antioch Av
become an Antiochene, am ef-

one of the tribes at Athens.

, ^, ,
f. I reproach in return AvtitxUyic, actuated with opposite
return railing for railing, 1 Pet. 2. 23. feelings, averse.
,, the price paid for the de-
liverance of a captive, ransom, 1 Tim. 2. 6.
,
aversion, antipathy.
sport by jumping one against
ransom in return. another, said of hares, K. 5. 4.
it isnecessary to redeem in return,
Arist. Ethic, t. 2.
c. dat. ,—
,. like a boy or girlj a big boy,
Luc. 1. 21. boyish, Earn. 38.
—— — — ——

,133 ANT
dash against, resist, Polyb. ,
-,
/,
,1 8.29. aor. 2.
ANT
I fall, set
134
my-

, ,,
ov, o, an antagonist adjectively, self against, resist, Acts 7. 51.

,
opposite, struggling against, c. gen. Alphe. I strike in return, aor. 2. pass.

,

,
12. reciprocal, Iphig. T. 446.
rivalship, competition, equality of Ethic, . 5.
to be smitten back, Arist.

,
power, Thuc. 4. 92. adv. with adj.liableto be beaten against

, ,.
the power or confidence of a rival, like a

,,
by the waves, lofty rocks, Antig. 599.
rival, Thuc. 8. 87. f. I fill up so as to counter-
I place by the side so as to balance a loss, 2. 2. 15. — supply a ship

,

compare contrast exposetodeath place —
bythesideo;z<2fe5fe,prorideonmypart,A.5.3.
,,
with its complement, man.
desire in return, . 2. 6. 28.

,
contrast, comparison. I do in return to, remunerate, 0.
I command in opposition, 5. 12. with two accusatives — retaliate

,
evil,

,
said of a general who, when the enemy are make

,
A. 3. 3. 6. I a thing
commanded to prepare for battle, issues a

,
for myself, claim, aspire to, 5. 2. 9.
similar order to his army, E. 4. 2. 12. ov, serving as a punishment for,

against the enemy move — Bum. 268. a punishment ,

, ,,
parallel with him so as to keep him in for, Hec. 1065.

,, ,
,
check, . 1. 6. 19. 1 wage war against, . 7. 2. 7.

,
invite, advise to take an ov, 6, r„ an ad-
opposite course, . 2. 2. 15, versary in war, enemy, Herod. 4. 134.

^, , ,
3. 3. 19.

,,
encourage in return, E.

distress in return,Thuc.4.80.
ov, 6, 'a, situated on the opposite
side, opposite, Med. 210.
f. march against, A.

, sail against, Thuc. 2. 83. 4. 8. 14.


, -

,
, , ,
,
against
,
preparation against,
i),

militaryforce,to resist an enemy, Thuc.l. 141.


I equip myself for war

an enemy, Thuc. 1. 80*.


, vj,

the antipodes, those who have


foot against foot,

their feet toward each other on the oppo-

-
,
site side of the globe.
prepare in turn for I
-, I act against, 2. 17. .

, ,
action, arm myself against, c. dat. E. 1.3. 4. exert myself against, oppose,

,
plup. I proceed leg. 2. 17.
against, encounter, A. 4. 3. 13. I send deputies in opposition,
I draw out in opposition, Thuc. 6. 75.

, , -,
confront^ Plut.
take the field against

by on the opposite
give in return,
7. 838.

aor. 2.
side,

lead out an army,
an enemy. Dem. 239.6.

Luke 10. 31.


J pass
adv. at a low price, Ay. 1. 18.
I give in return security
to a master to indemnify him for the loss
of a slave, if he died when summoned to

',
bear evidence for me, and put to the tor-

-, ,
Dem.

,
cause mutual difficulties, harass, ture, 979.
in return, Dem. 555. 22. pledge in return.
I

,
,),
restore, Isp. 7. 12. I draw the ground with a
— am bene^
. I suffer evil for evil
fited in return, Philoct. 590. p. m.
hoe to the roots of vegetables to prevent
them from dying for want of soil, 1 7. 1 3.

.(
,
, ,, ,,,
), ,
Ethic,

^,
s. 5.
I roar in the face,
Ai/r/7rf i/.'rij,f.^ y,sendback,remit,CEd.T.314.
/
i

ov, plur.
retaliation, Arist.

Thuc. 3.22.

on the
against,

an action on
address in return,

come
inf.
3. 13.1.
to march
forth in front, Thuc. 6. 66.
summon in return, retort
my accuser by instituting an-

,
.

,
other side, the opposite coast, U. 635. other against him, Dem. 1153. 3.

.
, ,,
adv. directly opposite, I bring so as

-,,
Luke 8. 26. Thuc. 2. 66. c. gen. to place before, 2. 5. 9.

, .
I stand about in opposition, ov, 6, q, face to face, opposite
change, Long. 38.
pressed around (Plut.

9. 623) by a coun-
is com- to, Strato. 90.
imp.
3. 8.
for -
,
teracting power bring terror or danger he stretched forth in return, E.
upon in return, Polyb. 4. 50. 1. 4. 1. 13.

, . ov, having the prow turned to-


aor. 2. I
embrace

osiers,
in return,
ov,
9. 4. .
hard as a rock,
a large basket made of
Yiyog, vj,

and serving for a cradle, Ion. 19.


,, .
wards, Herod. 7. 1 1. before the face, Trach.
227. —front to front,

station,
vav-
Rhesus, 136, in front of the naval

' 2
,
.. — — — —

,. ,
135

, ,,
,
^,
,
with towers,

in return, ask
Eum.

on
ANT
I fortify against, strengthen
691.
aor. 2.
my part, E. 3. 4. 10.
I ask
— am equal
7. 58.
ing opposite, Od.
to,

f. ,.
ANT
supply sufficiently, Herod.
holding herself, stand-

I
141.
play against another
136

, ,
counterbalance, Agam. 583.
I at ball, A. 9. 5.
ov, of equal force or weight, S. Att. , I oppose with an

-,
,
f.


,,
Elect. 120.
3. 15.
of equal value, equivalent, 0.
adv. with equal weights.
successfully coun-
army — arm
myself in array against,
against

is opposed,
resist, c. dat.
.
I
Rom.
set

,, /,
13. 2. 7. 1. 8.

teracting, E. 5. 1. 33.
Ai'Tiopea, f. wu, I contradict, ^, ,
— a sentence given against.
setmyself against iniquity, punish or avenge,
Jam. 5. 6. it is necessary to

sj, contradiction
, oppose, must arm against.
,

,
f. place in the opposite
I array against, Thuc. 7. 17.

— counterbalance, —

, ,
scale c. gen. stretch in opposition
I struggle
.^§ Hecub. 57, counter- against, K. 6. 8. resist— stretch in return,
balancing thy former prosperity by an equal Med.

,,
repay, 891.

,
weight of present adversity. cut against, cut medicine against

,
I
mc3 , an equal balance, com-
pensation, Herod. 4. 56. , . disease, dispense, Alcest. 975.
,
a wall raised against

,
-,,
,
I furnish a house so as to
correspond, or I furnish on my part, Ay. 8.6.
I am equal in power or magni-

tude, Thuc. 3. 11. xvrt,


f. ,
I draw in opposition to an-

other attract, K. 5. 1. divert, Prora. 337. —


.
, , another, Thuc. 2. 77.


, ,
a rival, Luc. 3. 147.

return,
,
a rival artist, Ranae, 815.

I lay snares against, plot in

,
against an adversary, Thuc. 7. 70.
,
a stratagem laid

,-
,,, ,
-,
,
ov, tearing asunder, Trach. 770. f. I honour, reward in re-

-- ,,
, distraction, Lysist. 966. turn, . 5. 2. 5. eyt) ? >?

,
an opposite party,
I stand in opposition, follow
7. 4. 2. 6
the opposite faction, A. 4. ]. 19.
avTis-efjiarric, ,
.
, a political adversary,
but of what indeed shall I be
deemed worthy by you what sentence
will you in your turn pronounce upon me,
Plat. Dial. 107. I choose a

-, , —
Herod. 4. 164. a faction, A. 1. 1. 10.
, standing against another,
adverse to, Septem, 523. /, )
milderpunishment instead of that for which
the accuser contends, Dem. 743. 21.
I place against, op-

,,,
-,, ,,
oppose, resist, Herod. 3. 52. —
(see
pose place meat before another, Ax. 3. 14.

,,
f.

,
ov, corresponding in motion, pa- 1. set one thing before another in value,

^,
rallel, Androm. 746.
move in aline opposite, moveparallel,2.2.2 1
A:/T/r£«T£vo ii«/,iwaragainst,c.dat.Rom.7.23.

-,
(
f. rpo), I

I pitch my camp op-


posite, encamp in front of, A. 7. 7. 20.
,
prize more, Thuc. 2. 85. c. ace. and gen.
put up in a temple in the room of something
received thence, dedicate, Hipp. 620. y\v
ttoIx
his foot before
Helen. 986, unless he put
my foot, unless he encoun-
f. I turn aside, turn about so
as to stand opposite, change my course,
-,
ter,

, ,
confront me in battle oppose argu-
ment to argument, refute, Dem. 1093. 22.

,
Ay. 1. 16. E. 6. 2. 16. I punish in return, avenge,

.-,,, a counter-motion of the chorus Iphig• T. 354. Thuc. 3. 72.

-,,^,..
from right to left, antistrophe, A. R. 3. 9. i —
I punish

,
f.

, , , turning opposite, corre- in return, Med. 261. —pay for, requite, M.


sponding,
Arist. Rhet. 1. 1. 1.

,,
6. 62.
dat. corresponds,

reason against, draw a



a counter-/Mr£, Plut.

contrary conclusion, Arist. Rhet. 2. 25. 2.


I aid in return, mutually
,Supp. 450.

'^ , 6, ,
deeds to be requited, Od. q. 51.

,
,,
f.
,
expiatory,

a bold adversary, Eum. 556.


,
I dare to oppose, act with
boldness against an adversary, Thuc. 7.21.
,
,&,
aid,

AuT -,,
Long.

oppose, Thuc.
,, ,),
17.
I

secure myself against, Thuc. 1. 7.

,, &- ,
struggle against, resolutely
3. 44.

hold
up a thing against another, c. ace. and gen.
Od.
I

%. 74,
hold out.

do you
,
,
,
ov, cut against a disease, i. e. cal-
culated to heal, Pyth. 4. 393.

f. ,
I shoot in return, A. 3. 3. 10.
I bore a hole from side to
side, penetrate through, II. . 337. %. 267.
ov, beating in return,
repulsive form, Herod. 1. 67. hard
;
hold the tables against the arrows, protect obstinate, E. 6. 3. 6.— responsive, reflected
yourselves from the arrows with the tables sound, Anthol. 2. 95.
— —a — . —

,. , ,) ,,
,, , , ANT
137 138
an impression taken from whelming tide, meaning an army flowing

, ,,
a model called into a country like a tide, see line 65.

, ,-
the true models.
,
Heb. 9.
sponding to or bearing the resemblance of
24, a temple corre-

pump. %
f.
Pyth. 8. 14, to put in the
sink, treat with
I
contempt.
draw water out of the
), , sink,

,
f. f. I strike (for

,
in return, react, Nubes, 1426. am adverse. you evidently draw from a cask, i. e. live
— p. in affluence,Theo. 10. 13. draw out time, —

,
y.ai, I am held in the place of another, c. spend draw out my ingenuity, exert, ex-
thou hast become haust, Pyth. 3. 110.— draw out life to the

, , ,,
gen.

,
woman-like, II. 3. 163. dregs, lead a lingering miserable life, Hipp.
per. pass, inf. 898. — draw out blood, shed, spill.
to have been killed on account of another,
that is, killed to atone for him, II. v. 447. —, a sink, pump, Philoct. 488.
vj,

,
an instrument
to draw water, bucket, John 4. 1 1

,
f. fa, I carry myself with equal

-,, ,
,
^,

,,
,
-,,
, ,
force against another, I match, II.
compare to, Pyth. 9. 88.
am resisted, II. a. 598.
,
357.

, a settlement on the wife in


return for her dowry, Agam. 414.
.

,
those who live in the same la-
titude in the opposite hemisphere, h. antceci.
I pity in return, Ion. 312.

q, for
of the sun or stars, Od. ,. 4.
,
, the rising

,
Olym. 6. 105.

,
1 sound in return, re-echo,

uttering con-
trary sounds, responsive, Archias, 28.

, ,

I meet, II. . 595.

meet a thing with my hand, receive, Pyth.

meet an enemy,
encounter meet a friend, assist, succour

,
6, , one who loves in return. 2. 130.— cause the ends of a thing to meet

,, - ,
I also love, 6 so as to place one on the other, double, II.

,
Theo.l2.16,thepersonlovedlovedinreturn. v. 415. pray, supplicate. Imp. had

, .
.
the loving in return, A.E.S.2. met, assisted him, II.

203.
,
,.
illumine in turn, Olym. 3. 35. f. I swear against,
ov, shedding blood for blood, said invalidate by an oath the oath of another,

,, ,, . ,
of death mutually inflicted, Septem, 898. Dem. 1051. 10.
atoning murder by murder, S. Elect. 250. ,
ij, an oath

-,, , ,^,
in opposition to
I export in the room of, another, a defendant's oath, 542.
I direct my eye to an
^), ,
barter goods, Dem. 926. 11. Ho. 3. 2.
fence against, obstruct, 2. 5. 6.
f.

object, I face, Acts 27. 15.


f. |, I guard against or

, I owe a favour, am obliged,

,
in turn

,
,,, ,
I guard myself
against, mistrust in return, A. 2. 5. 2.

, ,
mutual vigilance, Time. 2.84.
ov, corresponding to or adverse
Thuc.

,
,
, -
2. 40.

, a change,
a change offortune made with time, a
seasonable change, Septem, 707.
,,
,,
, a cave, antrum
in sound, adverbially, in unison from
with, E. Supp. 800. a cave, Pyth. 4. 81. for that which

,'.
imp. I sing in unison

,,
is within the earth, its bowels.

,
,, ,
,in return,
f.

.
,
,
with another, Anacr. 1. sound in return.
voteagainst,Thuc.6.24.
I gratify or favour
4. 1. 6.
6, a leader of the chorus in

full of caverns, A. 4. 3. 8.

,
the circumference of a wheel
the exterior rim of a shield— the border
of any round thing, a ring or boss on the
seat of a chariot, 11. s. 262.— the seat,

,
one tribe rivalling the leader of another in Here. F. 948.— the chariot, Hipp. 1231.
— the
munificence,

,, ,
Dem.
533. 14.
I rival, vie with another cho-
-,
a wheel
3. 104.
pole or firmament, Anthol.

regus of a different tribe, Dem. 534. 25.

aor.

,, ,
Herod.
].
I supply, furnish a sufficiency,
,
7. 127.
was not

an adversary of Christ, a
6,
sufficient,
,
,
,,
,
Imp.
20. 26.

A. 584. .,
I buy one thing

ov,
for another.
purchased in return, O.

directly facing, Iphig.

corrupt system of Christianity founded by


the Gnostics, which aimed at the subver-
sion of the Gospel, 1 John 2. 18.
02, , 6, and ,
a col- ,,
dry, Mat. 12.
ov,
f.

43.—
that promise but yield no rain
ov,

unwashed
,-
I profit in return, O. 5. 6.
having no water,


clouds

,
lection of filthy water in a ship sink
strong current, a tide, whirlpool, Olym. 9.
79. Septem, 797, an over-
— —
,
sou. ,
with holy water, Troad. 1084.
Ion. 89, myrrh that delights in dry
, drought. #, ,. 8. 6. 10.
— — — — —

,
,
, ,
;, ,
339

. ,.
,
men, unmarried, Hec. 414.

,
, , without

ov,
the rites of Hy-
«,
unespoused, illegi-
,
, AS 1
from above, from heaven from a

,

higher place from the beginning, Luke 1.3.
ov, belonging to the higher

140

^, ,.
timate, Antig. 991. , parts or country, opp. to Acts
celebrate, enforce by an oracle. 19.
(, ),
1.

, ,
ov, not to be surpassed, insur- Avayaiov, Att. a
—invincible, .
mountable
, 8. 7. 3. an upper room, a dining-room, A. 5. 4. 16.

,
ed,

,
, . ,, ,
Nubes, 363.
,,
a,
the want of shoes or san-
dals, the being barefooted,
,
2. 3.

6, ,
,
ov,

free
unshod, barefoot-

.
from hypocrisy,
Avaya, f.
avayta,
p. med.

by syncope avayui,
f.
for

avayja, &c. I
command, prompt, Od. |. 463. imp.
he commanded, Theo. 24. 67. fr. avoiya,
^/,
— avayr.pt, imper.
,,

avayrtfi,

,
sincere, Rom. 12. 9. to open the mouth as in speaking.
not liable to suspicion, Dem. avayy\, , ,
, a command, order.

,
,
43.
.
1404. 22.

,
. ,
, ,
— unsuspected.
out suspicion, ,
,,
ov,
£, not suspicious, Thuc.

one who does not knock un-


der, intrepid, invincible, inviolable,
4. 15. A. 10. 7.
adv. with-
3.

4.

, .,
(« priv. oov^), not yielding pain,
ov

adv. without pain.

f.
,
,
vj,

not feeling pain allaying pain, Pyth. 3. 11.
— Ajax, 555, an unfelt evil

freedom from pain.


aor. 1.
push up or back, force upwards
or — ava-

,,, , , , -, -,
f.
ov, not subject to authority,
Heb.2.8.— refractory,disorderly,Polyb.3.36.
poet, imp. —
—repel, Herod. 7. 139.
ov, unthought of, unsuspected, sud-
den, II. . 39. Herod. 6. 66. not known or —
or

,
,
f.

, ,.
.
I bring to an end
patch, exhaust, Agam. 24.

.
dis-
complete a
journey, Od. o. 294. finish a toork finish

,
a period of
consume, ..
pass —

time,
71.
finish
finish


my resources,

my object, avail,
understood

fr. a priv. dia.


— <?,
ov,
ov,
adv. inad-
vertently, without suspicion, Apoll. 3. 7.

imperishable,
unequal, uneven,
,
,

,, , , , ,.
obtain, II. . 56.
alizes for himself, Pyth. 2. 90.
brings about, re-
imp.
, q, inequality, h. anomaly.
ov, nameless, detestable, Hecub.
^,
for was accomplished, Od. g. 243.
was consumed, was spent, passed,
714. ,
unsworn, net bound by an
ov,

,
scil.

ed,
, ,,
, , ,, ,,,. ,, ,.
Theo. 7. 10.
consummation
order, Theo. 25. 91.
for


we

profit,
dispatch-

remedy,
oath, Hipp. 612.
adv. without an oath, ,
ov,
Herod. 2.118.

anonymous, obscure, a priv.

,
ing,

, , ,
efficacious,
. 20. 22, the most
duce
ov,

adv.
capable of dispatch-

effectual or sure pro-


efficaciously, with
ov,
Ion.
premature, Herod.

inconvenient season, Herod.


for aor. 1. inf.
2. 79.

, unseasonableness, an
8.
of
113.
,

for
success.

,- ,,
tive,
ov,
,
, q, one who dispatches, ac-
prompt, Theo. 28. 14. eoyov.
practicable, possible, aiy/j
. 1.

with the silence it was possible, advanced


8. 8, they advanced
-
, , ,
productive,

,, , ,
10.
,,
to refer to, impute, Herod. 1.157.

. 1. 6.

unprofitably, in an useless manner.


inutility

,
ov,
11. —hurtful,
useless,
.

Ay.
un-
1. 7.
adv.

6. 6.

,,
ov, unfortified,
inhospitable, inhuman

,, -
with all possible silence. ov, ov,
adv. above, upwards, up, opp. to
beneath— on the top.
top, to the brim, John 2. 7.

to the
the
upper part, summit the parts of the earth
that are highest and furthest from the sea,

,
,
— boisterous,
Af unsmoothed, rugged, ,
ov,

*, hy an axe, Mat. 3. 10. ascia.


A3 1 02, a, ov, c.
f

,
Iphig. T. 218.

,
worthy— fit,
meet, Theo. 1. 44. Mat. 3. 8.— equivalent,
worth the money, cheap, Theo. Char. 3.
.

, ,
A. 7. 1. 18. It is sometimes used as a pre-
position, c. gen. above the I will work

, ,
things equivalent to my supper, will earn

,
horsemen.

,,
rior,
a, ov, comp. of
further up.
higher, farther up or back.


higher, supe-

adverbially,

, ov, highest, uppermost, supreme


topmost, furthest.
adverbially, highest, uppermost,
my supper
,,
^,
adv. worthily, in a be-
coming manner, adequate,
worth, merit, dignity, 2. 3. 6.
ov, worthy of admiration, A. 10. 2.

ov, worthy of being heard, de-


serving of attention, Ho. 5. 4.
fitly.

.
.
,
,
141

,.
AS I
—— — ——

,
, ,

— claim — opinion, Thuc.


——
142

, ,
ou, deserving of attention, en- {j, rank

,
gaging, . 4. 2.
worthy of being recorded,
, ).
2. 88. — import, 3. 82. —entreaty, request.
thick-wooded, abounding with

^
ov, ou,

memorable, Herod. 1. ]6. .


praiseworthy, Dem. 1405. 25.
large trees, Jl.

.155.— a: augm.

-
ov, destitute of trees, 2. 12. cc priv.

^, .

, '-
deserving of love, not qualified by previous

,
ou, 5. 2. 5.
^^^- ou,

,
,
.
tou,

, ,,
,
worth living for.

value, E. 4.4. 6.
ou,

not worthy to be deemed life, of no


training,
employing on the emergence unfit
hands for manning the ships, Thuc. 8. 95.

, , , ou, industrious, O. 34. not disposed to unite in terms

-
7.
ou, worthy of admiration, ad- of peace, irreconcileable ineffectual, vain, —
At. 1.4. 4. —

,
mirable, Polyb. 15. 9. incapable of closing, incu-
the want of

,
ou, Ion. ou, c. rable ivound.

,
, , , , .
, by syncope worthy of
being seen, gratifying to the sight worthy
of consideration, O. 3. 4. Ssota.
#/%^£, worthy ofbeinglamented,Alc. 9 14.
. ou, worthy of being possessed,
.

agreement between those who treat for
peace, Thuc. 3. 46.


ou, unconducive, Thuc. 1. 32.

,
, , unwise, Arist. Ethic. »j. 8.
more foolish. '^, ,

,
valuable,

. .
estimable,

,,, , ,, .
ou, c.

At.

,
5. 2. 5.

3. 7. 1.
worthy of estimation,
adv. in
),
Thuc.
the want of intelligence,
6. 36.
,
,
6, \, not subject to controul,
folly, stupidity,

,
a worthy manner, adequately. insubordinate, Thuc. 6. 72.
worthy of beingproclaimed axle of a wheel a wheel, —

,
happy, 34. II. . 378. the track of a wheel,
,
, , . ^,, . , ,
, , fit for combating, ade-
quate, Herod. 6. 89. adv. in
an equal combat, on equal terms,Plut.3.1 1 8.
ou, or worthy of ,, 002,
oi, the tablets on which the laws of
Solon were written, Plut. 9. 116.
ou, driven by the axle, rapid.

, , a minstrel, bard ,

,
,
being hated, hateful,

ed, memorable, E. 4. 8. 1.

,
Eum.
ou, worthy of being record-

ou, worthy of victory, victorious,


367. adjectivelj/, expert in music or the liberal
arts,
—prophetic
, a song, Od.
aoioy, ),
most tuneful, Theo. 12.7.
bird. fr.
a. 1 59. elegy, aoihau,

, ,
II. 1. 5. 7.

,
,
,
vim.

mournful, Hipp. 1463.


,
worthy of being mourned,
of those
16. 769.
f.
who sing, scil.

I sing, Od. x. 227.


the muses, Theo.

,
ou, worthy of credit, creditable ou, celebrated, Herod. 2. 79. II. £.358.

.
-
easily believed as being probable,

, , .
4. 1. ,, ), having no home, poor.

,
,
-,
,
10.

.

worthy of confidence, trusty

,
,
more to be confided in.

-
,
graceful in form, 2. 8. 4.
ou, worthy to be seen, Luc. 2. 42.
ou, worthy of consideration
Herod.
ou,
5. 10.
using no wine,
not inhabited, uninhabitable,
,
Eum. 108.
xyvsiat, rites performed without the
use of wine.
, —

,
,
-,-^, , , ,
specious, probable, E. 6. 1. 4.
worthy of cultivation, .10.3.
,
6, worthy of being a com- than all,
neut.
.
6, ), not sluggish, active,
plur. adverbially,
1. 4. 2. a priv.
more nimbly

,
,
mander,
mand, A. 3. 1. 16.

-,,\\ ~,
,
more fit to com-

ou, fit
At. 4. 4. 10.
ou,worthy of honour,

, , worthy
to prove, convincing.

.
of being loved.lovely.
2. 3.
adv. promptly, with agility.

•/!?,
storm,
,
,
),
Ion. promptitude. ,
(condensed like the air in a
thick, crowded, collected
in a body, II. g. 498.
or counsel enveloped in the mind.
,
wisdom

,596.
— competent,
, ,
of credit, faithful.
Polyb. 1. 30. 5. Orest.
,
<;,

,
,
f.

,
I collect, U. . 270.
,
the inhabitants of Boeotia
of the Ionians, Ionian Aouih-,
an epithet of the Muses.
,
. ®,
f. p. I think judge or
fit,

— .
,
deem worthy, Luke honour, unarmed—unharnessed

,,
7. 7. 5. 5. ov, horses,
— regard as deserving of punishment, . ,
1 3.
6. 4. 3. — render worthy, 2 Thess. 11.
II.

, unprotected,
gen.
3. 3.
or
20.
, a sword, . 484.

,,
1 . 11.

ask, desire—
am honoured — deem

— dignity, Orest. — claim, h. axiom.


9.
lam deemed worthy,
myself worthy, claim.
, worth, majesty, IL 5.5. 10. |

|
, ov, invisible
the invisible properties of God, Rom. 1.20.
not capable of seeing, blind, Polyb.3. 108.6.
ou, iree from anger, meek, ao^-
— ——
143 144

,
,
,
ynrov, meekness, Arist. Ethic,

-,
139.
, meekness, ,
,
.
unlimited, undefined, Thuc. 1.
ov,


unregulated, Pint. 6. 280.
. 7. occoyr,-

,,
54,from supper, supper being the point of
time in which their arming began, after
supper,
alarm, after this alarm, Polyb.
from this

, , 2. 18. 9.

,
,, ,
,\,\,
f. I suspend, Archias, 22.
a suspender, belt
f.

a thong, Od.*.608.
I minister to, assist, Mosch.
i. e.
Mat. 25, 34, from,
since, the foundation of the world.
To be from some things is to be without them
' ,,
,4. 110.

wounded,
AIIO,
,
, an attendant, Od.
6,

,
tj, without
536.II. .
1 19.

ears. fr.

a preposition governing the


.
— not
or contrary to them,
arms, without their arms,

,
expectation of me, II. *. 324.
from their
from
thy expectation, wide of or contrary to thy

. 563, thou wilt be more

,
genitive only. (It seems to have been the remote from my mind, i. e. less agreeable
Heb. 2tf, ab, stem, father, source, origin) to my heart.

%
from from as the origin, cause, or instru-
, In composition retains its proper signi-

, -,
ment of an action, II. fication, and often gives the compound a
. 420, they know their works from the
,
sense the very reverse of the simple verb.

,
,
-,, ,
gods, the gods being the origin of their f. Ion. I
knowledge. carry away information from one party to
escape destruction from my hands,
js.371, to another, bring back tidings, make known,
— celebrate, Heb"
my hands
,
as the source of his destruction. II. f.622. 2. 12.

,,
he slew them from
his bow, his bow being the instrument of

.
, q, tidings,
I
Polyb. 24. 10.
take away in my arms
8.

,
slaying them, Mat. 7. 16, embrace, perf. part. pass,
you shall knoiu them from their fruits, b}' having folded the child in her arms, Heracl.
means of their fruits,

, Luke

-, , 42.
, not — com-

-, ,.
22. 45, from the crowd, on account of the solid, fluid, a priv.
crowd, from joy, because pact, a augm.and Herod. 7. 61.
of joy, Mat. 13. 44. — from as the subject of f. , I strip of beauty, de-

,
discoiwse or observation, or as the materials
out of ivhich a thing
from the
is made.

,
He discoursed
scriptures, the scrip-
flower, Agath. 15.

often followed by
f.

,
I prohibit, forbid. It is
its sense is then simply

,
tures being the source and by consequence

- , ' to
.
command,

- ,, ,,
the subject of his discourse of or out of 1. 4. 13, I command thee not to move
the scriptures, Acts not to stir, imp.
, 1 7. 2.
Mat. 3, 4, a raiment from the
thyself,
he ordered him to strike no one,

,
hair of a camel, a camel's hair being the 1. 4. 14. Standing alone or accompanied by

,
source or materials of it a raiment of a
camel's hair,
Mat. 7. 15,
ray
take heed from false
a participle like means
to give up, renounce, grow weary, A. 1.5. 3.
11.9, no .
prophets, false prophets being the origin
and consequently the object of your pre-

/,
caution beware of false prophets,
' .' 6
they two made the attack from
from the chariot, but he from the ground,
the chariot being the source or basis from
whence the former made
, -,,» ,
horses,

,
-, ,
II.
,
£.18,
i.e.
one gives up seeing no one is tired of
seeing— decline, fail, syn. with

as useless,

pass.
.
f.
, vj,

I hang from, hang by



things declined or laid aside
6. 2. 11.
prohibition.
render fierce, perf. part.
wild, Philoct. 229.

,,
their attack, the f.

,
ground being that of the latter on the
chariot, on the ground,
— means of a cord, Polyb. 16. 34. 9.— I stran-
gle, aor. 1. I hang ,,,
motion,

,
24. 31,
neither on an oak, nor on a

or distance of time and place as the effect of

he vanished from them,


II. . 208, from their native land,
,- -,
rock, II. . 1 26. from as the oiigin of motion,

-,
», ,
,,
Luke
myself, Mat. 27. 5. Theo. 3. 9.— am choked
with excessive

f.

to another, lead to
I
f.

aor. 2.
grief.
7, I
p. pass,
lead from one person or place
,.,
strangle,


aor. 1
109.
. pass.

,
away, or at a distance from it. lead away to execution, Mat. 27. 31.
. 447, at a distance from the conflict, ot
those from the country,
those whose origin is the country, natives
or inhabitants of the country, the country
people, Polyb. 1. 3J. 3. u. >',1\.
,
lead away plunder, carry, convey away
lead/row the right path, mislead, seduee-r-

f. ,
lead from danger, avert, withdraw.
I bring, carry away
a tribute, pay, Herod.
bring
3. 94.


,
145

,
, the leading away, mislead-
y,
ing— conveyance— payment, Herod.

,
— captivity— an action by which the thief
-
was taken and punished.

1. 6. ,, ,
', ,
against,

dat. and
..
ace.
S48.
to keep
Theo. 28. 20.
A

off' diseases,

fr.

,
. ,
inf.
—I
146
for
heal, c.

,
or 6, having
,,
mind, heart. for no hands, unskilful, wretched, 597.
II. s.

-, -
--, , ,
hug, accus. plur. Pyth. 1. 161. Olym. 2. 105, minds in-

-^,. . -,
I do not sing in unison— disagree
\.—
with displease, Herod. 2. 129.
ured to vice, incorrigible, violent, x,

-,
,.
II. .
I convey myself away, depart,
563.
f.

f.
-, I
p.
wipe away, expunge.
I become

,
render immortal, . .. insensible to pain or shame, am hardened,

-, ,
7.
,
,
unhurt, Herod. 1. 32 ; 5. 19. grow desperate, Ephes. 4. 19.
insensible of, inexperienced in, Herod. I keep off, drive away, re-

,
1. f.

and 371— protect

, ,
207. x, pel, c. gen. ace. II. a.
, ...
-&,
, . insensibility, apathy, 3. from, Od. . 364.

, -,for

-, ,
from,
,
II.

6,
. 663.
, without a peda- II. .
I heal myself of wounds, scil.
405. fr.

,
gogue or guardian, fr. , A.E. I speak the truth, 0. 3. 12.
. 1. Att. f. 1 change away, ,
, , (, ^), uneducated,

,
put detach from, remove, A. 3. 2. 18.
oft)
deliver, rescue from, save, 4. 1. 2. .

,
illiterate, Att. 4. 1. 4.

rity,ignorance,
, ,.want of
1 5. .
education, vulga- change place, depart— come off, acquit my-
self, Att. 1. 7. 3. remove disease, take —

, ,
adv. in a rude or ignorant man- away, Orest. 1051. deliver up, restore,
ner,

&
,,,, .
Ion. 249.
, is unskilful, absurd,

,
save, An tig.

Hec. 1222. deliver from revenge, spare,
596.
',
,
-, ,
, ,,, ,
-,
imp.

,
less state,

,
-
the want of children, a child-

bour under the want of children, to lan-

,
guish in a childless state, Ton. 620.
or
Od.
Ionic form of
aor. 2.
to la-

I take away,
.
419. prevented.

I take away,
deprive, rob. It governs two accusatives,

2.
moved,


p.
delivered, released,

self withdraw, get off) depart.


acquitted
deliver, save, my self— acquit, disengage my-

they withdraw themselves from


life, put themselves to death,

self, E. 4. 6. 3.
f.
^.',

5. 1 7.—
I will detach my-
aor. 1.

.
I am

.
re-

Herod. aor. pass, for , '^,, , deliverance,

, -, •
8. 3. 1.

release from— departure, Herod. 1. 12.

-, ',
3. 65, lest
. —
-, ,
I have my government
taken from me. release/row life, death, 5. 1. 7. issue.
,
,
f. I take away by
p. or f. I grind, II.
force, aor. 1. pass, «to^jj, when he
shall be taken away, Mat. 9. 15.
depart, Med. 938.— convey by sea, Herod.
^— . 522.— thresh, Dem. 1040. 22.
f. , I alienate,
become astranger, estranged,

-^
<y^£t/oi,having

, .
8. 57. alienated from, Ephes. 4. 18.
,
I cause to vary or shift from
,, , '02, ,
alienation, Arist. Rhet.

,, , ,
or
— stagger, perplex, Ion. 549. 1. 5. 7.
shifting, trucking, , oy (pen. short), soft to the
fraud. %// —
,
a fraud, i.e. a de- touch, tender tender in years, young
frauder, of strangers, Choeph. 998. tender £>/««£, delicate,pliant tender cheeks, —
,, ,
-, ,,
-, ",
oOg, 6, , childless, Hec. 809.

f.

f.
a childless state, Dem. 1365»
I hasten away, II.
imp.
234.

I ask what is my due of another, de-


,
,,,
—.
',
,^,
,
,
fair, blooming— tender feet, light
grapes, sweetjluscious
comp.
Theo. 1 1.
tender
tendent>«uc\?,gentle.
more tender, younger,
20.
about his delicate mouth, 29. 25.

.

for

,
f.

7, , ,,\\
mand, exact. It governs two accusatives, , tenderness, 2. 1. 22.

Luke 6. 30. solicit charity, to , , delicately fed, tenderly
... .
be required,

-, , 2.
v\, demand, Dem. 901.
educated,
f. —
II. 363.
f. , I soften,

,,
-, ,
,
decline of vigour, Long. 9. 15. render delicate, .

. -,,,
2.1.
f.

,
fasten the door, Ajax, 580.
-, 37, is rendered calm.
.
-, not overcome in wrestling,
unthrown, Nem. 4. 1 53. ,
I keep off, II. . 438.
—protect
f. chop off, U. 301.
I cut,
blunt, avert, Septein,
721. weaken, Herod. 3. 134.
f. I

L
— — — —

-,
-,
147

,
-, 148

-,.,
•/?^,
-,
661.
,
,, , , ,
ward
, ^, f.
I miss, failto hit, II. 466.
I answer, reply, Od. -. 298.
throw away by neglecting.
carelessly dropped, Philoct.

CvZ, aor. 1. m.
.

for
-,
1. 5.
ov,
in
I
,unworthy, a corruption of

aor.
rendered unworthy, degraded,
q,
Herod. 7. 96.
deem unworthy, disown, Thuc.

1. m.

he deemed him-
Eum.
hath
363.

-, ,, -, ,.
I off, avert, \oiyov
~Koiyov with an accusative',11. a. self unworthy, i. e. despaired, of nothing,
67. —defend, protect, II. /. 593, with the
I Plut. 9. 71.

, ,, -
dative — he did not defend ou, not to be transgressed
or help himself, Od. 578. . not passing from one to another in succes-

^^, aor. 1. m. or
- sion, perpetual, Heb. 7. 24. ,

,
take

-,
Dor. inf. Ion. for si I
— disavow, away — am

-
vyvaadxt, I reject, Od. x. 297. for myself I stripped, Herod. 7.
Agath. 66.
- 159. part. perf. for

, ,
850.
—-
»$%, he behaved with

-,
17.

I
I act impudently,imp.

consume away, diminish the whole


effrontery,

f. , p.
Dem.

-,, ^.
scil.

vitable,
having had their arms
taken from them, 9. 103.
ov, not to be deprecated, ine-
Dem. 772. 25.— inflexible
adv. inevitably, inexorably, Thuc.
-
, , -,
,
by detaching a part, Thuc.

,
7. 11. 3. 84.
AfF-iiithgoofcxtj I grow, become a man. uninvited, Thuc. 2. 98.
ov,

-
^, .
fafAxc, scil. became manly inexorable, Prom. 1 85.
ov,
in body, Ion. 52. wrench asunder, aor. 1.
or adv. or prep.
,
gen. ,, they cut Herod. 8. 90.

,
c. off,

,
, ,
,
apart, at a distance from the rest, ov, and ov, un-

-, -
, .
U. a. 48. furnished, unprepared, unawares, 2 Cor. 9.
f. \, I drop my flowers, wither, 4. 3. 4. 11. ,
-
,
Eccles. 1121. will adv. without preparation,

-, );,
scil.

-,
display flowers so as to furnish a crown,
Anthol. 1.488.

-,
its

I roast, broil, Ranse, 509.


,, to be unprepared.
ov, not expressed or defined.
the infinitive mood.

,
--,, ,
Pliit.3.

-
,
,
ov, remote from men, inhos-
pitable, solitary,

. ,
adv. inhospitably,
724, to treat a

anot&er habitation, Thuc. 1.


Prom. 20.

man with inhumanity.


I depart, settle in
2. —remove
, Ion. 745.

appease,
I
II.
I feel

.
ov, adj.
flowered, Theo. 2. 41.
185.
displeasure,

soften the displeasure of another,


aor.
am displeased,'
1.

deprived of virginity, de-


m. ^-

-, , ,
from a siege, abandon, 1. 140. an unvirgined virgin, Hecub. 610. i. e. an
,
ov, 6, t], guileless,
-,,
immolated virgin,

,
yov, freedom from artifice. f. ,, I take an exact account

,
.
,,
/'^,,,
.
- ,
221.

,,
imp.

adv. every where, in


he opened, II.

of

-,
pay— number my stock, have, .5.2. 1 5.
, number, Thuc.
deny, renounce, Mat. 26. 34.
I
ov, , , one who denies or refuses.
5. 20.

-, ,
every place, in every respect,

is refused, M. Supp. 1053.

,ter,
f.

Luke
I meet

^,,
cour, A. E. S. 6.

^, those
meet a friend.
throw myself in the way, Mat. 28. 9. suc-
meet an enemy, encoun-
14. 32. imp.
who

,
sallied
scil.
out met them,
at -
-,
speech, unmanly, cringing.ro
the want of manly freedom,
Antig. 441, she
was a denier of nothing, she denied neither.
ov, 6, , not using freedom of

,
Thuc.

^, -, , 4. 127. — meet an argument, reply to, Long. 44. 4.

-, -, , , ,,
refute. hang from, Androm.412.
,
,
f. I
the meeting, Mat. 25. 1. —bind to my interest, cause to depend

-,
site,

-~,. . /,
over against, rvja
to the opposite coast, Herod. 7. 34.
sc.
adv. directly oppo-

set myself against, Rhesus, 901.


ed, am remote
linger behind,
pending upon,
I depend upon, am suspend-
from, Polyb.
hang back,
4. 17.
12. 17. 1.

de-

^, , -, j^ca, I exhaust, exonerate,Orest. disunited, fluctuating, Dem. 43. 22.


1643. — extricate,
,
Prom.
exhaustion, Pint. 10.337.
adv. at once, once for all, altogether.
84.

,.
Rev. 14. 13. ,(, ),
adv. from this time altogether,
xqtu
I

make a thing
— — —
149
even with a design or model, i.e. complete

,

,
make uneven orunequal.

i. e.
,
an urgent business makes him come
rovh
Septem, 376, haste
makes his step not uneven with that man,

with speed equal to this man. Eteocles and


the scout hastily come o?i the stage the same

^,
moment — I prepare, Polyb. 31. 20. 10.
,
,
means simply to command, when followed
by ,

^, , .
tigue,

,.
-,, ,
2. 1.
as in Rhes. 934.
22. 1 29.
c.

renounce, Theo.
sink under, despair through fa-
dat.

Pint. 8. 797. Plat. Dial. 109.


I
I

return the same day, A.


,
behave with arrogance,
150

5.

-, ,
tal,

-,
, .
Herod.
f.
,
, completion, Luke 14. 28.
a round sum— amount, to-
7. 29.
take awa} , Herod. 4. 2. r
the breath, waft

$ ,., ,
— deprive.
f. imp.
away
It has often two accusatives
instead of one being in the genitive,
as the
I
wind does,
take away
fr.

-,,,,,
y. 445. —
f.
necessary to take from,
must abate, Equit. 917.
it is

I offer the fruits, Od.


I begin with an offering to the gods,
dual, instead of

,
from both
or
. 17.

} 7\ , ,
accusative

— deprived both of
he took away
life,
life
(for
.

,
gods,
, ,,,, ,,
II. 7. 1. 1.
offered, offering.
yc,
offering,
aj, the
to, a thing first

choice specimen, 1 Cor. 1 5. 20.


first
the first and
Orest. 96.
ad-
fruits offered to the

334, these he deprived of their fair arms.
One of the accusative nouns is however
sometimes in the dative, see II. . 236. aor.
1. m.
himself,
took away, robbed for
Od. . 646. (Similar to this is the

', ,
verbially, from the beginning.
,
verb fr. and wind, I

-,
,

, , ^,
all, altogether — the whole

complete, every, Olym. 10. 97.


take away as the wind does, waft away by
force, hence for II. .

thou hast taken to thyself,

,
I palpitate, quiver, Ion. 1207. 455.)

, -, ,
ov, 6, vj, from not having , enjoy est, Prom. 28.

, , , . -,
--,
621, to
,
tasted food, hungry, Od. . 7S8.
, ,
keep a
fasting,

f.
fast.
#y?^,Nubes,

flash from, emit ablaze.


ov, Ajax, 1206.
incessant,
deceive or delude by
soothing, cajole, Od. . 216. pres. optat.
might deceive me for himself,
I
,

-, , ,.
apart, asunder, aloof, that is, to answer his own purpose, -. 2 16.
, (,
, , arri), the false colour-
ing which passion throws over an object so

.
as to render it desirable, deception, disap-

,
pointment,

, Mat. 13.
run away, desert, Thuc. 7.75.
I hate, abhor, imp.

ye were hated, Thuc. 2. 63.


or ov, unshod, without

,
,,,

, , , , -, ^, , ,
22, the deceitful influence of wealth, ai sandals, Prom. 135.
, Ephes. 4. 22, the
desires of delusion, delusive desires.
ov,
with plains, a augm.
even, plain ground— abounding
^, Herod. 4. 62.

,\ ,, , f.

,
I deceive, betray into error,
Jam. 1. 26. aor. 1.

,
for
c. gen. decoyed me by her wiles, II. r. 97.
.
I
the event, Phil. 2.
,
f.

look away from one thing to another, see


23.— glance upon.
by S} 7 ne.

,
ceitful.

,
-, , .
;,
,
,
&>, ,

;6 ,
v\, ov,

in the arts of deception, cunning.


•/], ov,
a deceiver,
and

deceitful,
Od. .
1. 7. 5.
a, ov, de-
287, versed

5. 5.
aor. 1.
or
,
ovV
disobedient,
disobedience,

not disobey the command, f.


f. ,,
,
Rom.
I disobey,
II.
Tit.
II. 13.
c.
a. 220, did
1.

dat.
16.

, ,, f. I dishonour, II. v. 113. /j I will not refuse obedi-


:, , fatherless — born of an ob-
. ence to thee enjoining this com m arid, .

,
6,
scure father, Ion. 110. having God and — 300. those who disobeyed,

-,. , ,

-,. ,
not man for a father, Heb. 7. 3. the refractory, Heb. 3. IS.
,,
a festival at which chil- draw the image

,
f. I of,
dren were registered, see Rob. A. G. 290. liken, 3. 10. 1. —imagine, conjecture,
emit beams from Trach. 144. I liken myself

,-, .
, , -) ,
the eyes, behold with vivid or bright eyes, I assimilate.
Call. Del. 126.
,

,
the beams of the
sun reflected a bright image reflected as
ness, must paint,
f.
it is necessary to draw the like-

(,
3. 10. 8.
I roll away, fold
in a glass. Thus Christ is said to be a bright up, entangle. He-

,
image cf God, because, while God himself
is invisible, he is, as it were, rendered vi-

sible in the character of his son, Heb. 1. 7.


f. , I forbid, interdict, but it
rod. 1. 24, to be involved in difficulty
duced to distress, aor.
was involved, part.
duced, 9. 34.
^^, ,, 1.

In the active voice


L2
pass.
being re-
— re-
— —
151
means

,
i. e.
c. ace.
I

and
wrap up

II.
dat. imp.
. 201,
my ideas in dark language,
insinuate, threaten, vow, vaunt, glory,

which threats he threat-


() ,
he forced away, removed, Od.

,,,.. ,
parated,

Thuc.
II.

4. 36.
.
ov,

,
599.
unlimited, undetermined,
. 221.—se-
151

,,, -,
ened upon the Trojans, with which he a, ov, for —

,,
threatened them. aor. 1. ovl' ov not having bounds,bound-

, -,
,
11. -. 863.
nor did he vow or pray to the king,
they menaced, . 665.
less, immense,
fear, Paul. Sil. 30.
*-,
II. a. 13.
,
Od. . 195.— great

],
, , \,
by sync, for aor. or f. p. I
1. dual. Od. . 312, they two threatened. falter, fail in strength —
sink under labour.

, -,
y,r, a boast, menace, II. t. 244. wearied, exhausted, Hipp. 1354.

,,
—, , ,,. gen. plur. for
satiable of threats or boastings, II. |.
in-
479.
—prohibit.
Polyb. 81.

1.
has been forbidden,
9.
it

, ? , ,, 0,, ,
aboaster, menacer, II. y.96.
i, ov boundless, adj.

,
-,-,,
threatening, Herod. 8. 112.
given to threaten, Att.3. 10.8.
(«970, eifa) I am away, am absent.
innumerable, . 796. ,
,\",\\, main
II.

fo?2i/,Hipp.763.
, one

,, - , ,,,
ov, 6, ', ov, sj,

is wanting, .
1. 2. 10. Od. . 220. who has made no trial, inexperienced in,
when a . 304.
,subj. oVor? for unacquainted with, II.

man is away, Od. r. 169. imp. or Nem. 31, houses not

,
1.

I was absent, f. for untried by strangers, i. e. not unfrequented

, ,,
or onres-xi, he will be away or absent, by strangers, unacquaint-
Od. . 285. c. dat. . 6. ed with evils, adv. unskilfully.
6. 12,
all will

, ,, ,
will be absent from thee, i. e.
none
be present with thee, inf.
to be absent, to be wanting,

. ,,
»&
3 I go
2. 1 5. part.

fltvrsait, being absent or away, Od. v. 189.

away, depart, imp. ,


.

, ,,
.

fulness,
I do not know, am unacquaint-
ed with, Herod. 2. 45.

Dem.
378. 4. K. 7. 11.
,
inexperience, unskiU

ov, unexperienced in wicked•*

,
5. 3. 14. inf.

3. 8. subj.
ever depart, perf. m.
begone as soon as possible,
to go away, with-

,.$,
draw, said of the sun when declining,
if he should
pi up.
2. 1. 2, he went away, withdrew, 3. plur.
3.

,
,,
ness, free from fraud, simple, Alcest. 937. to

fair
simplicity, probity, Thuc. 5. 1 05.
ov, unexperienced in what is
and honourable, rude, unpolished, to

,
vulgarity, . 3. 10. 5.
.

,
vulgarity,rudeness,

,
2. 3.
,
1 .

all withdrew, 7. 1. 1.— leave. unexperienced in battle,


a standard ?- post, desert, 5. 1. 10. . unwarlike, Nem. 4. 50. /,.
.
, -,
,, , , ,
being a verb of motion is used
in the present for the future, abibo, I will
go, Od. . 595. bmtw/, will cease,
A^«ra, or
4. 5. 10.
I forbid, the sense of
.
ov, obstinate, Plut. 6. 226.
ov, offspring, descendant, Sim. 91.
I earnestly expect, wait with
earnest expectation, Rom. 8. 19.
,

,
,
,
,
aor.

themselves, rejected, refused,

7. 14.

$,
1. wnrux-ee,

having commanded, Herod. 3. 153, aor. 1.


m.

-.,, ,,
they commanded away from
part,

having renounced, declined,


6. 100. part.
--,,

f. I strip, lay aside a
garment, Coloss. 3. 9. strip of arms, 2. 15.
,, the laying aside a garment
the divesting the mind of those sinful
habits which clothe

it,

my mind.
Coloss. 2. 11.
I cause to

,
ov, 6, vi, not to be tempted. a 3 forget, efface from

,
Jam. be forgetful of your amazement,

-,
,,
1. 13.
— restrain,
. -, drive exclude cease your amazement, Od. .

,
off, 393.

,
I

-, .
imp.
2. 1. 16.

^,
c.acc. and gen. sup out of, swallow, Equit. 700.

,) ^
,
,
hindered, detained him from, Ay. 2. 25.
for
(scil.
excluded, II. . 238.
, pass. Att.
ov,
f.
uncombed,
p.
plup.
. 213, /\., —
,,
II. what space the ditch of away, repulse drive
I drive
the tower, i. the ditch before the tower, —
away danger, avert drive from office, ex-

[,
e.
. —
drive from the city, ex-

,
inclosed. clude, 1. 2. 1 5.

or I separate, II. B. 325. pel — drive along, hasten, he


serve as a common boundary, Herod. 1. 72. was Herod. 205. imp. 7\-

, ,,
far from, 7.
— line, graze, 7. 43.
116. perf. part,
up, 1. 154.
inclose, include, 3.
included, shut

, ,
aor.
he drove
1.
pulsed, A. 3. 1.
off, departed, 4.

\,
they drove away, re-
22. perf. inf.
. 1. 3.

imp. for to have kept off, averted, . 4. .2, 5.


— . —

-,
,
1.53

,
,
-, , .-
expose.
I refute, 6,
refutation, exposure, contempt, Acts 19.22.
ov, exceeding the measure of a

hundredfeet,vast,Il.£.245. ctaugm.
,
,
a freedman, 1 Cor. 7. 22.
^, ,
. ,,
close in another, inclose,
99.
7. 109. .,
— separate, 1.

not to be out-talked, ever


chattering, Ranae, 863.
A

72.— work

,
Herod. 1.

off, line,
154,• 2.
154

graze,

, make free, from unconcerned —


slavery, Lev.
f.

,1 9. 20.
I

oj, restoration to freedom,


deliver
, .,
-, without care, Nubes, 136.
I displace by leaning against

-,
, ,
manumission, Dem. 215. 25.
f. ,
I hope something from
another, expect, Luke 6. 35. give up the
——
— press against
cline to, K. 5. 32.

^,— ,
upon, depend, press upon,
— enforce — lean
. I
aside, in-
put myself
10. 7.

,
hope of, despond, despair relinquish as f. p. I forbid, Thuc.

^, — resign,

,
hopeless, Polyb. 1. 19. 12. 1. 29. refuse, 1. 121. plup. pass.

-, ,,
,,, ,
despair, consternation. had been given up or set aside,

,
6,


-ijiiM,


f.

or
I vomit out, II.

f. , f. 437.
I sell off, ?.
5. 48. am out of heart, am spiritless, see

,,-,
barter my person, prostitute, 2.8.21. o^,one whodoes notlook around

-,
sell

adv. and him, unconcerned about, Thuc. 1.41.


sometimes a 'preposition with the genitive, ov, interminable, Long. 32.
opposite, over against— in the presence, in ov, inconsiderate, heedless.
the sight of, Acts 3. 16. in opposition, — too rashly, Thuc.

-,
6. 65.

beyond, Herod.

,
, ,
, ,, ), ,
f.

with two accusatives, for


7. 55.
I strip off",

, ,
Sap. 16. 11. —
ov,
adv. inconsiderately.
not distracted, tranquil,
adv. without

,
scil. for distraction, 1 Cor. 7. 39.

-,
-, ,, — — -, ,,
they stripped them of their arms, 11.^. 195.
aor. 1. pass, -,^,,
uncircumcised, Acts 7. 51.
6, aj, not subject to vicissi-

-,
or I carry, convey away carry tudes, not able to return, S. Elect. 183.
.
,
,
to, supply with, Od. 360. aor. 1. pass. begone, Here. F. 260.
inf.
related,

-, ,
to be conveyed in words,
Herod. 1. 66.
. -, , ,. shameless,
f.

Nub. 1218.
I throw away shame, am

. ,
free from sorrow, x, f. I take off, draw away the

-, ,
, , ,,,, -
5t9T£i/^T0i-,nottobemournedover,Eum.915. Od. 134.
, skin, !-.

[, , ,
.
-,
year,
f. I absent myself a whole
1. 3. 13.
I forbid, Iphig. T. 552.
119. aor.
5. 8. 11.
1.
f. I restrain, hinder,
kept off, repelled, A.
Od. t.

,
perf. part, of impro- f. aor. 2,
— [$,
.
bable or unseeming alienated from, Po- Dor. Theo. 2.
lyb. 6. 26. 12. or 84, I go away, depart—
return, A. 1. 1.4.
adv. improbably, absurdly, Thuc. 6. 54. — go after, follow, Mark 1. 20. recede —
ov, unripe, Philip. 68. , from, forsake, John 18. 6. go after evil —
,, .. -, , go away as a —
ov, not to be tried or tasted, raw, desires, abandon to, Jude 7.
sour, Leon. Tar. 44. disease when cured, leave.

,
,

,
without a robe, undressed, away, skulk from

,, ,
6, f. I glide
naked,
^, Nem.
adv. for
1. 74. ,
as, in the manner as
battle, II.
, . 723.
one who causes another to

.
6,

,,, -, ,
-,
,
as if, as though. recede, a checker, II. S-. 861.

-,
less, -,
1

.,.
Tim.
or
1. 4.

I
Dem. 632. 10.ee,
ov,

work off, cause, produce


for myself, I exert myself at work, aor.
m. I
endless,bound-

wrought, made, 2. 4.
1

-, ,—
184. —
,,
I eat, bite off"

unheard
contr. ,,
having not heard
of, y. 8S.
I make
Dem.

,
788. 25.
absence,
of,

straight from being


Od. .

-, ,
f.

21. / those who make, crooked, direct govern, GSd. T. 104.


makers,
. inf. to effect, accom- f. I lull to rest,
plish,

-
passive sense in the
perf. inf.
shown, by me,
1. 6. 5.

^, .
This has sometimes a

, perfect

8. 8. 13. part,
and
to be done, to be
aor. 1.
sunk in repose, Trach. 1258.

,
-,
I avert by prayers, deprecate,
abhor, detest, Thesm. 714. Dem. 71. 17.

2,
I undervalue, Luc. 1. 62.

., . ,
^/?, finished, accomplished man, O. 11.3. ov, purified by being boiled or
aor. inf. to be effected, melted, refined, Herod. 1. 50.
. 1.

,, &,
), 10. 5.
I shut out of one place so as to in- Call. 6. 117. —
hateful,
hostile, malicious
to
— — — — —

,
J55 I 156

,. , , ,
adv. hatefully,
to, Dera. 61. 25.
, to be odious adv. without credit or confidence
ly
absurd-
to mistrust, K. 3. 7.

-,, ,, , ,,
enmity. 5,-
to come through hatred, to become hate-
f.

Polyb. 4. 18. 8.
\,
I mistrust, disbelieve, suspect,

disobey prove faithless, —

-,,, ,- ,,,-,
ful, Prom. 122 2 Tim. necessary to

,
2. 13* it is

,, aor.
subj.
.
&— f.

1 shall so hate you, 11.


415. render odious, cause to loathe,
1. I hate,
-, ,
disobey,

disbelief,
must

Mat.
',),
distrust, A. 2. 6. 5.
want of
13. 58. —
faith,
distrust.
Mark 9. 24.

Od. I. 105.
— , q, faithlessness, infidelity in
marriage Med. 423.
.— f.
aor. 2.
I am hated,
regard to the
aor. 1.
state,
in.

, , ,, )
become odious, Od. 202. II. . . 53. He- exert myself against, strenuously oppose,
rod. 1. 89. —
1 feel hatred or indignation Thuc. 1." 140.

-,
towards, Hipp. 1260. «/,asortof shoes, Dem. 1267. 23.

,, ,
— , (,
,
f. aor. 2. unerring, fixed
I have from, receive, Mat. 6. 25. I am — stars, steady, Long. 2. — straight, Paul. Sil.

thing,

, ,
Med.,
1.

,
away, distant from am far from doing a

,,
,
1097.
).
2. 62.— abstain—

?, , ,

I withhold, restrain

ficient, it is well,
withdraw, Od.
f.

Mark
aor. 2.
myself — am free from,
impersonally,
14. 41.
. 94.
it is suf-
51.—
steadily.

mense, Rhesus, 310.


ov,
for

and
adv.

unerring, undeceived.
(,
without

unfeigned, sincere.

ov, not to
,
ov,
wavering,

inaccessible, im-

, , ,^, . ,
-'),
-,-,
rod. 1. 2.
f. ,7, I strain,

,
purify, Ranee, 674.
I relate, tell,

, a
He-

tale,
be approached, inaccessible, immense, A.
4. 4. 7. —
long time, Luc. Ep. 29.— too
fierce to be approached, «. 533.— inacces-
sible // mes, raging, Pyth. 1. 40.— inacces-
narrative,
/,, ,
,, , ,
;, . ,
, , -,
Herod. 2. 3; 3. 125.
heedless— adv.
without care or concern, peremptorily, II.
ublefate, inextricable, irremediable, Ajax,
256. vast masses of salt, ee,

,
t. 309. ov, not navigable, 6. 1. 11.
f. &, am heedless, Apoll. 2. 1 7. ov, not to be filled, insatiable.
0, 335, , without ov, c. unfilled, insatiable,

, , — profuse, Theo.
loss, unhurt, safe, II. v. 744. Od. r. 281. greedy 15. SO.
prosperous, Leo. Phil. 6. ex-
•,•,
,, , v>„
safety —
innocence,Theog.756.
a vehicle directed by reins, a
adv. insatiably.
travagantly devoted,
-ia, ,
4. 1. 8.

, greediness, Dem. 614.


. , ^. 7.
cart, waggon, Od. . 69. «ot, ajy /. , , without
, '1 , ov, locks, bald.

, ,, ,
«~;5v>7.c, not submitting to the rein, ob-
durate, cruel, II. a. 340. Od. -. 97. savage.
savageness. adv. cruelly.
, ,
cold
sometimes
adj. a thick covering worn in
'c,

weather, sometimes single,


/^,
double, Agath. 8. II. 230. .
otTTYiXYip-x,
Long.
, ^,
9. 2. fr.
, echo from,
>;%£<y.
reflection,

, ov,ow, unfit for sailing, un-


navigable, Dem. 307. 18.

, ,,
unable to sail. —
-
,
, .
A^jjwgoj-,

Pyth. 8. 124. fr.


,
hanging, pro-
jecting, waving from as branches from a
tree, Od. ,. 435. —
wide, at a distance,

not likely to gain credit, im-


ov,

',
weather-bound, Iphig. A. 88.
02, oy\,
inability to sail,
experiencing adverse wind, being

oov, contr. ,
simple in composition, one, one-
, .-,
ovv, c.

.
s.

— simple
, -
probable, Long. 9. 14. fold
— simple
in colours,
— simple
unmixed, uniform

,Heb. 3N,
I am unwise or stupid, xqo
Il.o.lO,deprivedofreason.
a, ov, primitive, paternal, ("from the
father) the primeval land,
,
II. «.
easy, plain,
sound,
in contrivance, artless
discourse, plain, unvarnished

uncorrupted, Luke
— simple way,
unintricate — simple nature,
— simple 11. 34.
in
in

,27, i.e. Peloponnesus, where was probably


settled the first Grecian colony.

,
-,
ov, a pear-tree, pirus
7}, ov, ,
in disposition,
to

,
right,
open, generous, candid, opp.
— simple
guileless,
honest, up-
,
in heart,
a sincere

2, ,
apear, j)irum,Heb.DtN*,fruit,Theo.7. 120.

,
kiss, Anthol. 360. 2.
I make equal, fit, Plut. 1. 22. adv. simply, openly generally, ab- —
ov, 6, , c. faithless, with- solutely, abstractedly, A. E. y\. 1 3.— alto-
out faith or belief, John 20. 27. — trea- gether," at all, E. 4*. 1. 16.— generously,
cherous, . 207.— incredible— disobedi- candidly, Polyb. 32. 13. 14.— briefly, in fine.
ent, Luke
II.

12. 46. Luc. 1. 179.— ;, act with sincerity, Ax. 4. 2. 18.


—— —
157

',
, , ,
a^o&sf.wAsIniakesinipIe,expancI,Anacr.S9.
>~, — ,
tar,

., ,
impious, Cycl.
sacrifices offered
A
364.—
without an
§,
158

,, ,
\, simplicity, altar, i. e. of-
. on the bare ground.

,
sincerity, plainness, 1. 4. 3. fered
ov, without folds, plain, xl. 291. f. Att. ,I wean.
. ov, without riches, poor. I am away, cease to be or be-

, ,—
ov, breathless, Od. . 456. scent- come, Arist. Poet. 25. p. 98.
— unexposed to the wind,

, ,
less Plut. 8. 47. f. I protect, fence with eaves

, .
, .
adv. at one breath, or a pent-house shelter the eyes by means

,without breathing, Dem.328. 1 2. priv. of eye-brows, 1. 4. 6.

, ,
,, , ,
without breath or scent, Call. Ep. 31.
ex.;, , the want of wind, a calm.

for
thing for myself, II. a. 230.
imp.
prevented, Od. 419.
I take away a

,.
.
-— —
took away,

aor.
I change
1. 7.

,, ye have
I produce, Long. 15. 11.

I taste, partake of, II. 1. 3. 4.


I decay with old age.

15.
my
— despair,
— —
mind, abandon a design, A.
c. gen.
forgotten yourselves, are be-
,.,
--
,
,,
2.
—turn
to, reach,
I
out, happen,
Theo.
depart —
13. 15.
dismount
Luke 21. 13.
disembark
— come

,
come

193. 5. aor. 2. followed by ,


desperate, Dem. 52. 16. imp.
he renounced, abandoned, c. ace.

,,
,
re- ,

- , ,,,-
;,
a thing to descend by, plank. fused, determined not to succour, 69. pen.—

,
,
, ,
sag, , descent on land a place to
descend or disembark dismounting the
basis of a ladder, Polyb. 8. 6. 4.
,



acquit, opp. to
539. 3.

to condemn,

, the abandon-

, 6, a combatant who jumped ment of hope,despair, Thuc. 85. 3.


from one horse when fatigued to another. — aor. 2.
— —

,
am
—throw
f. ,
f. aha, aor. 2.
p. I throw away
m.
away, am absent from — depart, He-
p.
die,
I

, ,
, ,
waste, forfeit
throw away
20. 28.
out of

for
my hand, lay aside, lose,
—throw off a person, reject
price, undersell,
I am thrown away
O.
rod. 4. 5.
ing dead to sin, having renounced a
sin, 1 Pet. 2. 24.

a descendant, offspring.
ov, 6,
,
life
be-
of

,,
throw myself away, Theo. I write, copy from, tran-

,
reject for myself, f.

,,
11. 19. scribe, register, Heb. 12. 23.

,,, ,
), ,
to be rejected, II.
ov, 361.
casting away, a cast-off, loss,
y,
. I write down my name, register myself
rank among writers expunge, Dem.79 1.24. —
A. R. 1. 6. 4. Acts 27. 22.
f. I force away, beat f. ,
jj?, a register, census, Acts 5. 37.

I lame, disable, II. . 265.

off.

,
I was repulsed, II. 4. 2. 12. I lay bare the teeth, i. e. utter

,
with naked shamelessness, Septem, 447.

,
f. I cause to disembark, I

,, ,
^, ,
land, E. 1. 2. 4. A. 1. 4. 5. f. I make bare aor. 1. part,

&,,
^, aor. 2. I die. pass, stripped naked, Od. .

, .
I injure by depriving. 301. -
f. lay ba: e for myself,
deprived, Ajax, 954. 3. 4. 1.

,,
,
aor. 2. I shoot from. the making bare.

,
Aroo>fra, f.
other, view, behold

;, .
-,
I look from one to an-
look to a person for
refuge, A. 3. 1. 25. depend upon, expect

^, ,, ,
admire, 4. 2. 2.
ov, 6, , to be looked to, con-
spicuous, Hecub. 354. admirable.

,, , ,
— aor.
made her


1. m.
I give

a partaker, Theo. 17. 50.

bute a colony or settlement paying tri-


bute to the mother country, Herod. 1. 146.
away a part, II. . 231.
c. gen. thou hast

, 6, portion, tri-

, . , f. I squeeze out honey from


,
I bite off; 2. 5. 7.
shed

»
the Aves, 498. stole his f. I tears, Vesp. 983.

,
,, ,
, ,
songs from the hive of the Muses, said of

\2, ,
Pindar, Antip. Sid. 79.

,
babe does

f.
I
its

from the flock, kidnap,


,,
throw out of the mouth
487.
food, spit out,
I depart, return, Apoll.3. 1 143.

-,
I suffer or cause to stray
1. 4. 12. .
II. /.
as a
. 52.

sla}', II.

, f.
. 336.

f.

f|<a, I
§«, aor.
f.

f. , ,^
1.
frighten away, II.

I cut eff the neck,

hold out to view, publish, ex-


ion. -—
^, ,
f.

f.
I bubble, spit out.
, sieep away t h e ti m e, Od ..'.151.
6, i], to be driven from an al-
hibit, display,
— exert— render,
3. 67. —
themselves,
appoint, -,
Herod. 9. 71. —demonstrate
Herod. 3. 130. confer,

7. 223.
they exerted

. — — I —

,
150
, or , exhibition

,
, ,
disapprove, determine, Herod. 1. 152.
?,
~16

,,, , ,,,,, , ,,

^,
demonstration appointment perform-
,
it was decreed, E. 7. 4. 34.

',
,
ance, Herod. 1. 207. I disapprove, reject,

,
f.

.
f. ,
ov, demonstrative, Polyb. 4.40.


I decline through timi-
.
Mark 8. 31.
to disapprove of, must reject
it is necessary

reprobate, —
dity,
12. 2.
3. 4.

f. ,
behave cowardly,

pay
3.

tithes, Luke 18.12.


Herod. 1. 199.

f.
f. ,
I incline, Od. /. 372.
-,
I crop off, Olym. 1.20, en-
joy, Pyth. 9. 193.
aor.
other
1. m,
Ion.

—receive a person, entertain — receive


I receive
f.

from an-

or
claw lacerate, II.
f. I tear off,
324. Agath. 71. .
,
hend, . ,,
,
a approve
discourse, assent compre- of, to, I deplore, S. Elect. 1128.

,
,
ceive a
an

,
attack.
— accept an —
3- 10. 15.
submit
discipline,

ov,
follow — sustain to,

worthy of being received, ac-


office re-
off.
f. —
robbed, Theo.
having stripped off my cloak,
myself— am stript of the
I strip
aor.
5. 15.
3. 25.
I strip

,
Tim. 3. 1.

»,
ceptable, 1 body, separate from it, said of the soul, see

,
a, ov, to be received Anthol. 3. 292.
,
,
it is necessary to receive, 0. 7. 35. ro, a place for undressing at

,
,, ,
UKobsKtTn(>,

-, ^,
, ,
,,,
,
,
a receiver of the revenues.
a receptacle, repository.
, acceptation, 1 Tim. 1. 15.
the public bath, Au. 2. 10.
I refuse, deny, II. a. 515.
I make away, sweep away,

,
f.

^, ,
,, ^, ,
f. ,
aor. 2. pass.
the skin, flay, peel, Theo. 25. 278.
I take off

a hide, peel, Herod. 4. 64.


I tie, suspend from a peg —
11.

-,
. 329.
inf.
from, I live upon, Thuc. 1. 2.
p. m.
for

smell of, Plut. 6.46.



I
I do.
derive subsistence

,
am short of, lack, Thuc. 2. 13.

,
f. aor. 1. pass.
kkoIsyic, deficient, destitute, Plut. 5. 208. aor. 2. I separate
, a man who is away from those that bear the same yoke disunite, —
his own people, a sojourner, Mat. 13. 34.
^,, , force from, Here. F. 1375.
,
, ,
,
, ,. ,
f. I go from, leave, home,
travel, sojourn abroad, Mat. 25. 14.
,
6, one who is fond of tra-
f. I am confident, O. 1 6. 6.
wonder at, admire, Od. .. 49.
.

,
ccK-ohipyryig, adv. from afar, 5. 1. 8.

,
velling, active abroad, Thuc. 1. 70. f. 1. by syne.

^, ,
service,

, , , .,

.
, absence from home, foreign
f. ,
2. 8. 1

I acquit,
aor. 2. pass.
Dem. 542.
I
6.
run
— strip,
Long. 1
f.

6.
,
I reap,

,
Meleag.
I deify,
mow,
1. 17.
clip ofi^ Orest. 128.

rank among thegods,


, deification.

^ , ,, ,
away, escape by concealing myself, and putting away lust, laying
v\,

,.
thus differs from

,,, -,
speed, A. 1. 4. 8.

7.
skulk from,

210. the avoiding,


I escape by
— 1. 6. 19.
escape,Herod.
Dem. 568. 8.
.
aside, 1 Pet. 3. 21.
removal/Wwz life, 2 Pet. 1. 14.
ov, neglected, Od. . 296,
ei^o^£TOi,oi/,laidup,reserved,Dem.l376.pen.

putting away the body,

,
(see give from, give I run away,

,
I f.

away, give up give up — to another what is about to run away, Herod. 8. 56.

,
due, pay, render —
give up a trust, restore,
deliver up— give up a thing promised or
Miroown, ,
y> a repository, granary, Mat.3.

vowed, fulfill, realise give up in return as—


12. storehouse, Thuc. 6. 97.
f. ,
I render savage, exaspe-

, ,
the seeds are when intrusted to the ground,

,,, ,",
produce, bring forth, Heb. 12. 11.. deliver
an account, bear my testimony, record re-
turn a favour, give up for money, sell, A. 7.
6. 30. —give up a person to the consequence


rate, Plut. 10.
rendered

S. 47.
fierce,

— press upon, Luke


—,
f. ,
139.
Long. 1 7.
treasure up, lTim.6.19.
.-, squeeze,press from,Anacr.
8. 45.
I am

,
of his ac/icms, recompense,punish, 2 Tim.4.8. the squeezing out, elision.
,,
,
, , .
restitution, explanation. f. m.
f. I plead my own cause, jus- aor. 2. I die away, perish, 4.
tify myself, E. 1. 7. 10. 8. 3. fut. subj. aor. 2. xn
I throw, spurn, away, Here. F. 1204. and though I
, for

,
f. I separate myself as a he- should not die, Theo. 3. 27.
retic, I form a schism, Jude 19. I am emboldened, behave
Akooiujxo), I chase away, pursue, E. 6. 2. 11. with insolence, Plut. 291. insolently
^-, \ — f. f. %, I decline claim, Dem. 1407. 14.
6.
— — —

,,
', ,
161

from a
aor. 2.
horse,
f.
Herod. 1 .
I

80.
jump

shatter, Phoen. 1408.


off, spring

,
,,
burning, !, .
336.— parch by excessive
heat or excessive cold, A. 4. 5. 3.
I excel, surpass, Od.S. 127.
162

,
I jump from, mount up as the conquer, 219. I kill.

,,
,
,
,
smoke,

, §.
II. .
748. spring from a ship, /3.702.
repugnant to my feelings
ov,
disagreeable, II. f. 261.
,
,,.

25.

-,
, call,
ov, unseasonable, Philoct.
I call

pronounce, deem, Iphig. A.1354.


away, recall, .
1 56.
1.4.

,,
,
, ,
6,

f.
unwilling, Plut. 6. 326.
Ay. 1. 84.
I slay, sacrifice,
I reproach, Ajax, 738.

,, £ I reveal, Mat. 10. 26.

-,,, undone, , Olym. 2. 29. revelation, development,

,
ov, v„
who has left his home, 1 Cor. 14. 6.— revealed will, Gal. 2. 2.

.
,
a settler a colony, A. 5. 3. 4. f. I give up, faint through
— am absent,
,,,
,
f. *;, I am from home weariness, (Ed. C. 1776. 2. 6. 35.
-,

,
Iphig. A. 680. ' sfc (forego/) turn from the right
f. I

,,
,
from me.

, , ,
, , ,,.,,
Theo.

settlement, A. 4. 8. 17.
adj. of a colony,
colonial towns, Herod. 7. 167.
f. 7, aor. 1.
15. 7,

absence from home, a colony,

I cause to
thou dwellest far

-
road, decline, Ion. 135. bend, wind into a
circle, . 7. 1. 3.
f. , for
I

. 467,he breathed out his soul,i.e.expired.


opp. to
,
I look for with the
breathe out.
*
\pv-
II.

,,
f.

, , ——
remove, banish, Od. ^, 135. place in an- head thrust forward, earnestly expect.

^, , Rom.

, ,
other family, Orest. 629. lead, establish a sj, earnest expectation.

%.,
colony, build, Thuc. 1. 24.
I shut out by raising a wall , I
8. 19.
break or beat down,

,
f.

against, obstruct, encompass with a wall, Here. F. 1057.

, .
Dem. 1277. 12. Thuc. 7. 73.

, , ,, , - ,.,,',..
I lament, complain with la-
mentation, Herod. 1. 114.
f. ,
loudly lament, bewail.
4. 66, they sit

I
Ion. for
apart, or aside.

cut offfrom the stem. seeEur.


Herod.

,
, (for from
money paid by a person that his own life

,,
tnight not be forfeited for the life of an-
, Supp. 716, lop

up, reserved,
f.

.
off, Thuc.
I am
2. 76.
laid by, stored

,
3. 1. 1 1. Coloss. 1. 5.

-,
other taken away by him), ransom, price
reward, Olym. 7. 30.

,
f. ,
I compel a person to pay a .', , ^,.
up, it is destined for
f.
men
Heb. 9.
to die.
1.
27, it is laid

,ransom, enforce a fine or penalty, Dem.


629. 22. to ransom for myself,
I clip, lop off,
Hecub. 9 1 0. for
shear,
thou

,
liberate, Rhesus, 177. hast the crown of thy battlements, thou

, ,, ,
6, , unpunished, S.Elect.1071. hast the battlements which crowned thee,

,
ov, demanding vengeance, venge- shorn away.
ful,
,
Here. F. 8S7.
I inflict punishment by way pieces, expend, Pallad. 145.
f.

,
ha, I dispense in small
,.
,
f.

', ,
-,,
, . ,
,
f. ,
of ransom, avenge,

shoot, Antip. Thess. 63.


imp.
Nem.
I hurl a shaft from the bow,

I go away, de-
5. 28.

,

for the dead,
f.
f.

,
f.

mourn, Herod. 9. 31.


I abstain from grief, become
I
I behead, Mat. 14. 10.
perform funeral rites

,
.
^, withdraw from, II. heedless or remiss, 11. -. 413.
part 408. depart

from life, perish am absent, Od. . 109.
, . ,
I proclaim by a herald,

, &,?, ,^.,,
clean, -
2. 2. 15.
.1. 3. 5. purify
I

,,
f.


expiate
I wipe,

purify myself, purge away, .

,.—
announce the eale of by a crier, Dem. 687.
23. —prohibit the use of by an edict or pro-
clamation, 1006. 21. publicly command,

K. 5. 2. 18. disinherit a so?i. This act is

,
purification, 1. 7. called and a son disinherited
f. I restore was

,
to its
blish,
former state, return, A.
reform, Acts 1. 6.
subside, settle, Plut. 8. 232. aor.
was made whole, Mat. 12.13.
axo»«r#sw/?,£6J::,>},restoration,theestablish-
ment of universal righteousness, Acts 3. 21.
6. 3.

1.
esta-

pass.
to

,
,. ,
Thuc.

,
,.
7. 81. try at

, 6,
f. expose to danger,
my peril,
I move away, Od.
I
risk, •.4.2.5.
167.
the release of a slave, or a
song sung for his deliverance, Equit. 20.
I go away, Od. *•. 156.
.

I burn away, remove, destroy by ,,


I proclaim with a trumpet
,
,
163

, ,
/, , ,
,
,, f.
I bewail,


c.
tear,

ace. Vespa?, 562.


rend asunder, split,
——a

-imp.
— —

I remove
displaced, Od. y. 232.
,
things placed in o?'derf

164

, ,
Theo. 22.14. reflect the voice, Archias, 28. I play at a pastime
f.

Ion. -,- called the cottabus, E. 2. 3. 24.


, , ,

, ^
f. I shut the door against, so as to f. 1 lighten, alleviate, Hec.

,shut out, Luke 13. 25. shut from the light,

- ,,
, , —
shut up, confine preclude, prevent,

11.10. intercept, for
.3.

-
105.
f.

ov,
, I hang down,
steep, craggy, abrupt, full of
II. -. 879.

,
they had been intercepted. He- precipices, Dem. 793. 6.
, -
,, , ,
rod. 9. 50. f. I separate from, Herod. 2.

,, ,,
^,
Thuc.
what was before them with
4. 34, prevented from seeing
their sight
36.
pass,
f. aor. l.m.
I answer, reply

,
deprive, Herod. 1. 37. imper. after deliberating, John 11. 23.

,
aor. 1.

,
15. 43. part,

,
for

,
having shut up, confined, 15. 77.
, ,
shut to, close, Theo.
for
, an answer by a judge
consequence of the evidence placed before
him, verdict, condemnation, 2 Cor. 1. 9.
,
in

,
3j, the shutting of the door *j, the action of separating, ex-

against vie, the excluding, Thuc. '4. 85. crement— answer, reply, Luke 20. 26.

,,
— ,
ov, o, q, having no lot or portion
destitute, Pyth. 5. 71.
,
ot>, rugged, craggy, \. 7. 15.

I beat off.

,,
f.

,, f. I distribute, appoint by

lot, I choose by ballot, select aor. 1. m. —


Herod. 4. 200, they of themselves repulsed.
to be thrown oil' the horses,

, ,
>,
,
Dem.

,f.
they selected or assumed
for their portion, Plut. 9. 287.
,,
\^,
-, - 778. 4, ye were appointed.
appointment made by lot.
turn aside, deviate from
-^- £.3.14.
its lip or rim broken
(for ^),
place out of sight, hide, con-
ceal, Mat. 25. 18.
I
treasure up —
off,
having
Acharn. 458.
f. • 3
aor. 2.

,
,

,—
2. 8.
verge towards, Theo. 7. 140.

,
leaning against, 3. 38.

,
decline, A. 2.
incline, am disposed to, Plut. 6. 541.
,,
,
— . I conceal myself, or am concealed,
2. 6.29. . 15.
hidden luritings, i. e. writings
ov,
11.

,
ij, inclination, bias, partiality. that would be thought genuine, but kept

,, , ,
wash away, secret for fear of exposure, apocryphal.
8. 823.
f. I
— overwhelm, Anacr. Ep. 82.
efface, Plut.
f. , aor. 1. I kill,

-,T

, I

-
wear away by gnawing,

,
V esp. 67 9. enfeeble, opp. to
f.

the danger, Thuc. 3. 30.

),
6.2.1.
delay, defer— shrink from
must
',. tease, destroy, Mat. 10. 28. aor.
slew, 11.

. 675. plup.
.
423. - inf.
^,'^',. .
pass,
2.

was killed,
Ion.
165.
he

.
/,
,,
,
, ,,, ,
delay, hesitate.

,
,
.
, tardiness,
I sleep, rest
Thuc. 1. 99.
from a thing, aor.
472. part. perf.
/, slain,
slay, .
,
.
6. 5.
496.
1 7.
for

,
1.

.
, ,
f.

,
Vespas, 213.

,
repose.
f. -/, I spend the night from

,
duty, Dem. 238. 10.
I swim away ,,
save my-
self by swimming from a sinking vessel,
,


f.

f.
\,
,
,
a colony, Call.

bring forth, James


away, Mat. 28. 2.
I roil
rolling off, Long. 40. 4.
2. 72.

1. 15.

,
Thuc' 4.

,
I lament over, Agam.l 555.
25.
,
carry away or home, E.
f. I
f.

I prevent, Herod. 1. 66.

,,5. 4. 58. —
convey, lead away, IT. 7. 3. 4.
,

receive by lot, obtain, Here. F. 331.— fail
aor. 2.

,
q, return, Thuc. 1. 137.

,
I

,,
conveyance, transportation.

, .
vaunt in consequence, Here.
to obtain, am disappointed, Ion. 609.
I take from, Helen. 917.

.,,
F. 981. ov, having the throat cut,

24.

',
,
pass,

,,

f.

,,

Plut. 2. 625.
,
avert an arrow
/,
I cut off-

,
dislodge, A. 3.4.

the cutting off, apocope


thing cut in rough pieces, rugged parts,

ling of debts, Dent. 215. 25.

amputate, aor. 2.
I was cut off, repulsed.
,
a morsel, Theo. 10. 7.

the cancel-

I draw to a head, accomplish


,

slaughtered, Hec. 207.

,,
I
^,
kick — spurn, Prom.

3. 1. 10.
select

p.
f. ,
take from another, receive recover,

takeout of other things, choose,
take the consequences of my actions,
suffer, enjoy, Luke
I strike with the heel*
652.

23. 41.
f.

pass,

Rom.
, aor.

1. 27.
2.

— give a summary answer, Herod. 5. 73. take something sousihL obtain— take away
— ——a — —

,
165

, ,.
/,, , ,
, ',,, --
a person from
take into

, , ^,
,
my

captured, intercepted.
for
conduct, intercept
others,
house, admit, entertain.
I am taken by the enemy,

intercepted, Herod.8.11.
Au. 1. 16. inf. to sentence to
death, cause to perish, E. 1. 4. 6.
I am destroyed, 1. 1. 26. inf.

to perish, opp. to come into being,


destroy, kill, condemn,
1 (>()

/, ,
Ion. for to As. 1.1. 14.

^,
,
receive, 3. 146. perf. m. lam undone,am
.

, ,
render illustrious ruined, 1. 3. 8. aor. 2. m. I

,,
f. I

noble exploits,

,., f. -,
f.
Herod.

,
I
lick off
derive pleasure from
I become renowned/or

I
1. 41.
shine forth, U.
swallow,Nubes,809.

.
r. 381.
was destroyed.
is vanished, Od. x. 413.

. 585. subj.
done, II. .
763. inf.
,
perished, 11. £.223.

,
may perish, am un-
for
was lost, escaped, scil. water, Od.

,, ,, to perish,

, ,
the use of a thing, enjoy, c. gen. 4. 3. 4. die, II. ^.117. part, killed, lost,
— -I am delighted with/lphig. T. 454.— de- optat. for that
rive benefit from, Here. F. 63. experience — they might be destroyed or lost, Od. /. 554.
— —
^, suffer, Phoen. 1211.

,, , AtzoJwiya, f. |, I cease cease to exist, die,

-
,
use, enjoyment, Tim. 6.1 7.
1 II. . 149. opp. to imp.

, , - ,
surable, palatable wine, oi

,
men
given to pleasure, the voluptuous,A.E.a. 5.
fit for enjoyment plea- — '',
stopped themselves, desisted, Theo. 22. 19.
I rob. aor. 1.
they took away for themselves, robbed
m. to,
of,c.

, ,, , :, - ,
. ace. Herod. 1. 70.
f. p. I

,
select,

-,
choose from, 8. 12. I babble, trifle. 7•/•/%?., to

,, I reject, renounce, loathe, Plut. 10.377.


, picked, choice, A.
I drop from,
f.

216, I leave by going away, forsake a


, distil,
2. 3. 9.
Od. y. 107.
Plut. 6.
,
have surpassed in

-, ,
ed, E. 6. 3. 1.
Polyb. 33. 12. 10.
folly,
I raise a clamour, A chain. 967.
adj. not having a city

road. 1291, the great city as a city


banish- —
- no
friend, c. ace. Dem. 865. 6. II. 5. 1. 10. longer exists.
leave off work, abandon a place, E; 5. 4. f. — I slip, slide

,
A.

,
Si.

run,

,,

,,
leave behind, the sense of
6. 5. 3.
. 8. 3.
—leave behind running, out-
— decay or wear away,
intransitively, 2. 8. 14.

,
Herod.

',
7. 218.
1 1 .

necessary
to tarry behind, must remain, O. 7. 38.

, I am short of, behindhand


fail,

— want, am short
in

it is
of,
,/,
off Thuc.

escape, Nubes, 1255.

,
,
7.
f. ,
65. slip/row life, die.
Att.

Slick, lick, II.


the son of Jupiter and La-
6,

tona, Apollo— the poetic name of the sun.


of Apollo, made by Apollo.
,
I hurry away,

. 123.

,
with, c. gen. Dem. 312. 27.
/•, ,
,
, leaving off desertion
bill of divorce, Plut. 6. 544.

,
,
, , the remainder, the rest.

,,
— f.
6, the destroyer, Rev. 9. 1 1.

I plead in my own
defence, defend myself reply to.
he pleaded, E. 1.4. 6.
,
— -
.3.
, , a defence, apology,
Luke xao^oyix,
?,, , ,
f. I lick off 16. 21.

, -,
6, unfit for, unskilled in war, I give an account of to the
. un

,,
7. 4. 1. warlike, public, state, iEschin. c. Ctes. §. ix.
Pyth. 5. 89, a state of society well regulated f. ,
wash away I I
by laws and free from military despotism. wash for myself, Od. . 219. — purify my-

,, ,, , },
an unjust unnatural self, 1 Cor. 6. 11.
-7\:,
,
war, Here. F. 1 133.— adv. with- I bewail, E. 1. 1. 18. c. ace.

-0, ,
out war or hostility.

Att.
f. by sync,
I cause to perish,
p.
away the
I purify myself, II. x.
6, a pest, one
refuse of a table, Od. q. 377.
who
313.
wipes

^,
5 ,,
destroy, aor. 1. have lost, Od. I deliver from bondage, redeem,

§ -^,,
I

,
/3.

,
46. inf.
6.— overturn,
for
ruin, E. 2. 1. 2.
to destroy his
to cutoff, kill,

x^o
. 3.2.

,
Exod. 21. 8. Dem.
159. 15.
deliverance from bondage,
jj,

redemption, purification, dismission of sin,

,,
life, to him, II. . 852.
kill for Ephes. I. 7.
,
Heb. 9. 5.

,
they destroyed, slew them, x. I loose from
f. loose from

, &,
268. perf. inf.

Herod.
for
9.
perish, 7. 218.
18.
to have caused
the destruction, E. 1. 5. 10. fut. part, ouzo-

pa'JS.
about to destroy,
about to
an accusation, acquit loose an assembly,
dismiss


loose an army, discharge, disband
loose from disease, heal, Luke 13. 12.
loose a captive, restore loose from prison.
release— loose from labour or care, exonc


M2
167
,,,^
rate—-loose from
Luke 2.

- II

the body, cause to die,


29.--loose from obligation, forgive,
—loose from


—— —

I am
A II

leftalone, Plut. 2. 657.


they shall be left alone,
168

,
6. 36. desire, satisfy, gratify, i. e. excluded, Thuc. 3. 28.

;, ,
&
Aw. loose an argument, refute. wipe, wash,

,
2. 1. 5.

,,
I
-

,
.

, ,
), release, deliverance. brush away, II. 737.

-, y, ov, prone or fitted to loose,

,.
having wiped off, suppressed
,
wrath. my

, , .
calculated to dissolve— adv. 6, , foreign to the muses, un-

, ,
loosely,

, , , f.
5. 4. 24, they
were inclined to separate or detach him.
disgrace myself, Ajax, 217.
foa, I cull, crop the lotus —
lettered, Med. 1089.
skilfully, ungracefully, atso,

,.,
f.
adv. un- —

I
I dissuade,
blow my nose over-
II. /.


109.

,
pick hair, Iphig. A. 793.—mark out, select reach I wipe myself,Equit.

, ,
,
persons for death, Eur. Supp. 449. 910. must wipe, Cycl. 558.
,,,
, , >, , a soft part of the bread
used to clean the hands and thrown to the
dogs, Equit. 414.
,,
f.

for
wiping the nose.

&,
Isend away, fut. subj. azso-
they may restore,

,.
ctzsof&xum, f. aor. 2. uxzs- II. -a. 85. aor. he sepa-
1. m.
.
I unlearn, forget, 4. 3. 3. rated himself, withdrew, 629. separated .
-
, , ,
for himself, ejected, Iphig. T. 1259.
I wither away, die a gentle
death,
or
away, Dem. SIS.
, ,
7.
f. I shake, wipe
itetafav, from whom I withdrew myself,
whom I

,
abandoned, Med. 166.

, , , ,,,,
17. brush off the dust, f. aor. V. give

-,,—
Luke 11.— impress, Theo. 95. away, impart, 1 Pet. 3. 7. they

)
10. 15.
I take an impression of a fed themselves upon, appropriated for their
thing, I copy feed upon, partake of, Equit. own food, Aves, 1289.

,
816. I go away, withdraw, Od. s. 27.

, -
,,, withdrawn from I

,
battle, {instead of

,,,
A.

-,
3. 4.

, - 20.— disabled. receive benefit to myself, enjoy, imp.

,
. he enjoyed, c gen.

,
beat vyjto, for II. q.

,
off— fight at a distance, Polyb. 8. 7. 5. 25. f. m. of will enjoy,
.
,
,
I break wind, Herod. 2. 162. 762. aor. 1. m. for

, ,
,
10. 16. 4.
-,
I dissuade,
I distribute

I layaside care, Vespa?,



Rhesus, 900.
intrust to, Polyb.

5.
optat.
est enjoy.
wash away, wipe off, II. jj. 425.
f. -,
I
aor. 1. m. I
II. . 556, thou might-

,
,
-,
,,
I

,,
f.
measure out, 0. 10. 10.
measure
I
for myself.
lengthen out, Plut.8.43.
persevere in anger, though
— sttro- wash the hands or the feet, Mat. 27. 24.
,
I
to,
act under the total absence

,?,
of sense and virtue, am desperate, or mad,
a washing-bason, or tub.

,
f.

remotefrom the object of it, c. dat. I1.C.772. E. 6. 4. 23. desperate, mad.

.,
, . I take off an imitation, copy, adv. furiously, E. 7. 2. 8.
3. 10. 3. , imitation. ac, 7j, a state of mind implying the

,, ,
paid, E. 6. 2. 9.
,
I hire,
6,

vj,a person hired but un-
disbanded, Dem. 67.
rent,
,,*, -,- Thuc. 3. 69.
,,
absence of sense and mora! character, pro-
fligacy, infatuation,
, c\ ),
Theoph. Char. 6.
unaccustomed to toil, lead-
— without trouble,

, ,
f. I ing an unlaborious life

,.
.
remember, hold in remembrance, easy, (Ed. C. 1 656.
, freedom from labour, .
thought of him, II.
aot'JTOi 428. confer. —

, 2. 2. 15.

,
a favour from the recollection of a favour adv. without toil or trouble, at ease,

, more easily.

, ,,, -, ,
received, Alcest. 300. 2. 1. 24.
cause to be remem-
f. I f. I depart home, return.
bered, bring to mind record repeat, — — must come back
to Troy, after

Dem. 3 4 5. 10. remember an offence, avenge, having returned home to consult the oracle,
As. 1. 2. 31.
,,
.,
a record, memoir.
as implied in
vius on iEneid.2. 178.
see Ser-

-—, ,
live in enmity with, Herod.
take a solemn
oath in consequence of something previously

said affirm on oath, II. ». 332. deny with
I

f.
remember an affront,

I
3. 49.


falsify,
adv. apart from, without the as-
sistance or concurrence, II. a. 541.
I separate from the truth, evade,
(Ed. T. 488.
f. , Att. , ,. I tear away with
an oath,2.3.8.— Inthis sense it is followed my nails, snatch, Equit. 706.
by ,Cycl. 265. Arc^.vo:, ov, inhospitable shore, (Ed.T. 20
— — — —

,,
16

, ,
404.
banish to a strange land, Plut. 9.
am estranged from my
native country, Hec. 1221.
— ,
, ,
^07\.
,
from— set
f.
f.

sail,
,— I mould, copy from.

return by sea, Acts 27.


f. I
170

sail
1.

, —
f. f. I plane, shave
away scrub the body as in washing it
smooth the wrinkles of old age, II. /. 446.

,
lop off, f. 81.
— ^,
Herod.

,,'.,

,,
contr.
8. 75.

^,
departure, Herod.
,, 8. 79.
the sailing away,

I satiate, glut, gratify, Thuc.

,
, I render dry, dry up. avt/lfagoit•* 7. 68. 1 allay thirst.
,^,,^, -'[,.),
.
,,,. ,,.
^,
to become dry.
rod. 7. 109, dried up.
,,
I polish —
sharpen, Od. . 260.
lie-
be satisfied, Arist.
I fill
Rhet.
up. cttsoijAjj/Ooj^might

the brim, satiety.


filling to
1. 10. 17.

, ,, , ,
raise the voice, Plut. 4. 618. f. I strike with terror, as-
for tound— I am thunder-struck

,, ^ ,
, ,,
will turn their faces from
the enemy, skulk, 1. f. 101.
,
, a place aside from a path,
a recess, Achar. 81. ,
— faint through terror, Antig. 1189.
ctTZOTzKyxToc, ,
6, , astounded, mad.
Vespse, 942, having
be rendered dumb.
his jaws paralytic so as to
», labouring under apoplexy,
-

,
I step aside.

-,
about to ease one's self, Plut. 1185. apoplectic, Arist. Rhet. 3. 10. 7.

, ,
f. ), aor.I cause
1. •/{, , sudden seizure, apoplexy.
to cease, restrain, II. S40. .
stop an enemy, — aor. I. m. he

,
,
defeat

,
,, ,

cause to desist, Eur. Supp. 639.
I restrain myself, imper.

desist from, c. gen. Od. x. 340.


r„ an attempt,
to receive, i. e. run the risk of a
-
-
, ,,
clean
Ion. for
pebbles,
,,
started awa}r, Acharn. 217.

net,
f.

Od.
Luke

.
I

95.
wash away
5. 2. imp.
— wash
was washing away the
clothes,

,
battle, Thuc. 7. 21. Ion. f. I breathe

,
I make a trial of, out life, expire— breathe out sound, utter

,
f.


attempt try, sift, .
2. S. 3.— make an at- — breathe out the time, pass the time till ex-
tempt upon myfriends, deceive, Prov. 1 6. 29. pired, Isthm. 7. 48. —
exhale cause to eva- —

,
f. -, I send away send away porate—smell of.

-,
a prisoner, release, E. 1. 2. 8. send a mes- — f. |<a I suffocate,
senger, dispatch, 4. 5. 12. .
send home, — strangle— drown, Luke 8.33. — choke, Mat.

,
,
dismiss, 7. 5. 14. send away a thing bor-

,, ,
13. 7.
give over labour, cease working.

:,,
rowed, remit, return, A. 1. 2. 1.
I send away from me, discharge, re- I go away, A. 7. 6. 23. imp.

,
,,
7<,
-^:, ,
,
pudiate, decline, .1.3. 16. export, Ho. 1.7.

,
),

,
— yic, , send-

ing away, dismissal, discharge, Herod. 7. 148.


/),
, , I break wind.
I fly away, return, Pax, 719.
I thicken, clot
as cold blood, stiffen with cold, freeze, .
/,/,
do
,
little
f.
I departed.

I buy of. imper.

thou buy, Range, 1258.


1 saw asunder, Ammian. 19.

aor. 2.
from a thing, Od.
,^.,
q. 457.
adv.
I

far,
take a

afar
,

, ,, , ,
5. 8. 6. Ranse, 126. at a distance. 209.

,
off, II. ..

/, ,,
f.

- ,,
I jump off, rebound, hasten

,.
I run away before, oh. 366.
,

, , ,,
1 ,
away, c. gen.

fall

11. |.850.

,,

f.
I. 2. 16.

a springing away, Plut. 9. 83.

from, Acts 9. 18. fall down, drop,

fall from my object or aim, fail



aor. 2. 26. —
I

send dispatch
fling to the ground, Od.
having hurled,
I cut off, Od.
82.
.
to
327. part.

475.
.
.
aor.
place,
.
1.
Od. .

, , ,,
in, miscarry. avoid, allay thirst, Meleag. 10.
I cause to wander, drive I fly off' * an arrow
',
f.

away, Od. x. 75. aor. 1. pass. — vanish as a dream, 469.


,
,
II. sj.

S. 573, thou hast been wandering flew, — , '^, an exile, (Ed. C. 207.
.

, , ,
glanced away, c. gen. II. 291. ov, out of sight, unseen, Ajax, 1 5.

, ,.
f. I cause to err, mislead, AsJosTya), f. I spit out, disgorge, II. . 246.
.
err. 0!>,
Mark 13. 22. I wander,
they have gone astray,
Tim.
ro the action of spitting,
2. 16. to reject, abominate, Theo. 27. 5.
ov, to be spit out, Med. 1373.
1.

;,
apostatized, 6. 10.
ctzso^ccuwig, ,
1

,
jj,

6,
wandering, A. R.
straying from his
3. 1 3. 5.
mother,
I cause a person to dance by
kicking him, Equit. 694.
a vagrant, Bianor, 16. I ask of, Herod. 3. 154.
— — — — — ——

., ,
1

,,
171
ov, unwasted, unsacked
,
, — invin-
,
f. -/], I sup of, gulp down.
172

cible,
002,
4. 2. ,
Hecnb. 906.

,
ov, impassable,
,

in the way, A. 2. 3. 8.— difficult, perplex-

,
ing,
ments, . 1.6. 3.

,
in difficulties or embarrass-
— needy,
, A. 2.
perplexities, impediments

ewfeus. o; - ,
, ,,. ..,,
<-
vanish

s. 595.


1
f.

fall
flow away, pass as a stream,
away
I

as leaves, decay.
ov, flowing away, exuberant, Hes.
drawing away as a pipe, lis. 4. 3.

Thess.
I render destitute.
2. 1 7, bereaved.
the most indigent or destitute, Ats.
4. 2. 38. opp. to
distressing or impracticable,
,-,
,, adv. with difficulty,
to be in distress, to be doubtful.


f. I am
doubt, inquire, am at a loss, (Ed. T.

-,
I
454. xnogsoux:, I want, desire am want-
in want
cczsogov
A. 3. 3. 4.

— am perplexed

it is

, -, , , ,
away, lost by dancing, Herod.

,
Phceniss. 856.

at a distance
ride at anchor,
fluctuate,

,
breath
Heb.

from land, Thuc.


Dem.
I
P)tt
—weariness,

1.
for Fptf.

21.
extinguish, perish, aor. 2.
I
6. 126.

am tossed, beat about


1.
danced

labour,

137.

, -.
,,
ed, nothing is wanted or xxv should have died, was nearly
xzzsa'Zyv, I
-))
,
,
desired, A. 1 3. 7. 2 Cor. 4. 8. dying, Anacr. 7. perf. (from
,

,
, want, doubt, perplexity, A. S. has died away, become extinct,

,
^',

,
,
,
,
1. 9. distress,

, ,,
ject from laziness

,
,
I
jump off,
ov,

f.
Luke

,—
withdraw from an ob-
neglect, Aw. 3. 7. 9.
hammer away wrench from one's
grasp, waste, Od. x. 404.
21. 25.
given to doubt, doubtful.
hasten away, II. s. 105.
Od. . 95.retreat hastily,
I


.
8. 8. 7.

horse does his rider,


dissipate,
Luc.

brate with

-,
1. 111.
Nubes, 287.

I
pomp, Ran. 715. 857.
by transp.
p. pass,
I shake, throw
c.

behave haughtily
ace.
— shake
.
off)
7. 1. 18.
off sleep,

— cele-
as a

,
f. ecua, I sprinkle, deposit seed, hasten away, withdraw preci-
I
— shower, scatter eggs.

,
Herod. 2. 93. pitately, Od. . 236.
ov, a place ,
sprinkle I set a mark

. -, ,
water, a vessel used in sprinkling, ion. 434. upon show from clear marks, demon-

,
sew

, , f.

again, Herod. J. 193. citso,

praises of warlike men,

,,,
flower, Theo. 7.

,
f. ,
,
I sew up in consequence,

I recite from the poets the


3. 3. 24.
I flow away
.
—wither
as a
121.— shrink, waste, as
strate,
E.
,&,
>,—
sanctify
2. 3. \5.
Herod.

f.

Ion.
-,

fulfil
9. 71.

Ion. for
I
—proscribe,
rot away. A. 5. 4. 10.

render holy,
an oath, Herod. 4. 154.
I
confiscate,

part, -

,
flesh does when exposed to the fire, Med. f. ), I render flat,

slip away, escape, Long. 33. 3. we have our noses flat-

,,
1201.
,
,away, .
and ,
f.
5. 2.

,
, a flowing

announce.
5.— efflux.
I forbid,
the announcing, Polyb. 14. 2.
tened, Luc. I.

,,
from shore, Thuc.

,,
f.
431. I turn away, withdraw

I
4. 25.
am, become
silence, a figure of speech
silent.

,,,, ,, ,
*?,

, ,. ov, not to be spoken or divulged by which the meaning is suppressed and

,,
— —
mysterious impious impure, obscene, — left to be gathered from the context.

,
, , ,-
Dem. 1335. 5. I cut off by a ditch, in-

, efflux, effluvia, Long. 1 3. tercept, A. 2. 4. 2.


f. , I break, wrench f. I scatter, aor. 1.

asunder. fa%&t ' for he caused to disperse, ordered to de-


2. pass. part, . 309. imperat.

,
burst, II. -a. 587. aor. II. dis-

,-,,,
optat.
Herod.

, ', - 8. 19.
might be torn asunder, sipate thou,Od. S. 149.
I disperse, scatter abroad,

, -, , , ,,
u adj. rugged, steep. E. 5. 4. 42. inf. of
, that which bursts forth, a -. 4.
to disperse, depart, 11.

—98. -, , furniture, baggage young —

,
stream, efflux precipice, adjectively, craggy
shores, Od. v. children as part of a luggage, Gen. 4e. 8.
p. m. I decline through f. I lay aside, deposit bag-

,fear, shudder at, Od.

f.
f. , p. pass.
7[, I throw away—jump
.
^,,—-
52.

off, Acts
gage or furniture
remove
Plut. 8. 683. —
to strip a
— dismantle, evacuate
to strip, reject,
man of his life,
27. 43. — reject— throw
tack, Herod. 8. 92.
Asoppoi%hu> } I whistle, scream as a bud.
myself upon, at-
/, , kill, Luc.

tent, opp. to
2. 670.
6, }, not living in the same
. 8. 7. 3.
— —a — —

,
,
173
f. ,, /,

f. , I move

, ,
Atqs-s "/, f. I uncover thereof, Mark
174

,
my tent, Gen. 13. 18. encamp, dwell at a 2. 4.

-, , —,,
, ,
distance from the enemy, A. 8. 4. 21. I contain. ward off, avert.

- , ,
upon, Plut.
I rush, force my way to,

, f.
3.
, 472. Herod. 1. 120.
I throw into shade, con-
fall f.

pass, plup. pass,


reduce to a narrow com-

tracted, Theo. 22. 101.


I
were con-

,
,
Long. aor. 2.
ceal,
, 17. 3.
— remove, Theo.
I depart, II. ex.

,
a shadow, Jam. 1.14.to, 522. 24. 54. c. ace.
^,

,
I fix or fasten a ship by aor.

!,
f. 1. I

,
means of an anchor, Olym. 6. 270. send away, dispatch — dismiss— send, put
I wither away, inf. forth, Mark 4. 29. aor. 2. pass.

^,
to pine, Vespae, 161.
I survey, view, Hecub. 939.

,am -, ,
was Acts 13. 26.
sent, delivered,
rh mission apostleship, — Rom.

\, , ,, 5.— expedition, Polyb. 26. 7.

,
I disperse, dissipate.
f.

I angry with, II. . 65.


1.

, 6, plur. oi ..<\, com-

-, missioners of the navy, Dem. 1146. ult.

,
f. I rob, spoil another of
, —

,
his arms, c. ace. and gen. Theo. 24. 5. , a delegate, apostle arma-

<, , I cleanse, wipe away, Her ment, fleet, Dem. 30. 5.

,
f.

21. — lick tt/iiA /$£ tongue. I renounce the love of a person,

,
, -,
aor. 2. pass,
cause to waste, consume,
f.

disappointment, am baulked.

, ,,, ^, -, —
I

I waste, pine with

I brush away flies


with the tail drive away an enemy, scare,
reject,

and gen.
Theo. 14. 50. hate, Agam. 510.
f.

.
, 3. 1. 6.
I

other his right, with two accusatives, A. 7.


6. 8. I am deprived, with-
,-,

deprive, rob of,
—withhold
c.
from an-
ace.

,
held, Jam. 5. 4.

,
terrify, Polyb. 30. 5. 1 6. ye suffer your-
f. ,, I tear away—force from selves to be robbed, 1 Cor. 6. 7.
unsheath, Mat. 26. 51. —he tore defrauder, Nub. 728.
«7ro5-fgy/T)j<:,ui/,arobber,
,,,
, ,^, -,
,
himself,
22. 41.
i. e. withdrew from them, Luke
torn away,
dragged by the hair, Androm. 403.
— ,
i. e. f.
a depriving, fraud.
I fix upon, ul. 272.
shine with, c. gen. Od. y. 408.

,
to, a thing I rub the body with an in-
<?{,
tornaway,atwig,buncho/gra£if?.s, Philip. 20.
, strument called I scrub, 0. 1 1. 18.
,
, , — f. I pour out a I deliver by word of
f.

, —,
libation, cause to drop away, Od. f. S31. mouth, ask magisterially, catechize, dodge,

,. ,,
02,— ,
-,
distance
f.
f.

ter, Herod. 6. 108.

,,
f.
I hasten, drive away, de-

I brush off' the dust, Aves,8.


I distill, shed grace, breathe
favour, Isth. 4. 124.
I stand away, place at a
cause to separate or to revolt,
Luke

1.

A.

,^,,
11. 53.

118. stop

3. 4. 21.
f. , I take away the edge, Luc.
up the mouth.
I encamp at a distance,

f.

turn away, divert turn from


I —
aor. 2.


-, ,.
Herod. 9. 113.— weigh out, repay, IL v. vice, convert turn from what is right, per-
745. see vert —
turn away a person asking, reject,

-, , adv. at a distance, Od. . 146.


to, sedition,
seditious or turbulent citizen, Plut. 9. 227.
turbulence — conceal. .
refuse, Mat. 5. 42.
1. 4. 6. dislike, forsake
turn home— restore, Mat. 27. 3.

turn away out of sight,
re- — —
--
,,

, abscess— distance, interval, A. E. oc. 10. ,, am distorted, rejected•— I turn my-

,
, the giving way to, the ceding
of goods, Dem. 386. 36.— departure, death,

,, ,—
Hipp. 277. distance, 4. 7. 5.
.,, revolt apostasy, Acts 21.21. —
.
,,,
self away, am turned away

reject, Tit.

-, ,
Herod. 7. 160.
1.
turn a person
from me, turn away, hate, Iphig. T. 806.—
14. -, averse,

-,,
to, divorce, , a turning away or aside,

, —
a bill of divorce an action brought against
a freedman for neglect of duty to the mas-

,)
aversion, averting,

-,
source, Herod. 2. 13.
Med. 799. — refuge,
— apostrophe.
-
re-

,
ter who had released him, Dem. 940. 15. ov, turned away —averse,
f. -,
I separate from, desert, . Ajax, 70, the averted
— am distant from rays of his eyes, his averted glances.

.
4. 5. 11.

-,
,
must keep withdraw from.
aloof, |>, I hate, shun

^, ,
f.

, a deserter, apostate. through hatred, Rom.


f.
6,

sade, fortify with pales or a trench,


I fence round with a pali-
E. does straw — thrust
f. , 12. 9.
I roll
off, II.
away, as the wind
. 703.
116.

7. 4. 32. I pluck away figs, Equit 259.


,, , ,
— — ——
175

,
,
he

, ,
,
shall
f.

be deprived
, I spoil, rob.
of, Prom. 171. — am
stretch myself, I inveigh against
I
stretched out, extend, A. 1.8. 7.
,
176

,
,
f

6, , turned out of the f. keep off, intercept, by

,,, ,, , ,
grene, . ,
synagogue, excommunicated, John 9. 22.

,
I tear asunder, Theo. 22. 105.

f.

,, -
f. I cut open the
throat, slaughter, Acharn. 326.

&, ,
I waste with the gan-
grow scabby, Herod.
,
means of a

aor. 1.
E.
f.
wall,

,
c6to.c, to,

f. ,,
I
A.

I
2. 4. 2.
a bulwark, E. 1.3. 6.
terminate, end in.
bring to an end, finish,
he completed the wall,
was finished,

,
4. 28. 3. 2. 8. pass.
f. aor. 1. I dis- 2. 4. 64. pres. optat. for
appoint, cause to drift, drive away, Od. might carry to effect, execute, prac-
I

,
,
y. 320.
1

,
am
472.

, - , —

,, , --
disappointed, supplanted, Iphig. A.

,, hurled from a
aor. 2.

sling.
tise, II. 1.4. 25.— pay tribute, fulfil, 3. 2. 8.
— render, f. m. they will ren-
der themselves, become, A. 3. 1. perf. part.
accomplished, O. 3. 13.
Polyb. 4. 78.

,
bind, tie up.

,,
f. I to, effect, 5.
tied up, strong, nervous, Luc. 3. 9. f. ,, aor. 2.
I unseal, break open the — f. }56), aor. 1. pass.
sealsput upon parcels or boxes. Helen fav, 1 cut off— cut off £/*<? <?«</, behead
was now unpacking the treasures she had cut off the nails, pare — cut off a way, inter-

,
, ,
brought with liar from Troy, Orest. 1 105.

, ,
Lucill. 9.

, f. ,
I derive scent from, smell,

I keep oft]
cept,
scil.

rod. 1.
separate, Herod.
82.
he cuts off for himself,
appropriates, Theo. 7. 86. He-
— cut off one place from another,
72. 1.

^,
).
, ,
, ,
withdraw, remove,
I
II. .
restrain myself, abstain, see

,
96. Od. . 94.
brief
ov,rugged, A. — severe, 4.
adv. with severity, ab-
1. 2.

, ^ ,
ruptly, briefly.
ready at the
f. I act, get , and ,, cutting off,
spur of the moment, deliver extempore, amputation, . 2. 1 . 22. severity,Rom. 1 1 . 29.

, he
,
,
sketch hastily,

,, , - ,
,
,, -
-
pour out spontaneously, Luc. 2. 453.

enacted, Arist. Ethic,

ground to support the


f. ma,
tore, rent asunder,
rashly

I split
s. 5.
, a stake fixed
net, K. 10. 7.
away, aor.
Od. . 507. imp.
1 .
in the

opp. to
f.

7. 1. 2. ;
f.

attaining, miscarry, E. 6. S. 6. aor. 2.


I lost,
,. ye
have been unfortunate or unsuccessful,

the disappointed or unfortunate,


»,

.
perf.

.
I

6. 19. c.
miss my
gen.
aim, fail in

,
,
,
pass,
rod.
split,

- ,
,, , , -
9. 61. aor. 1.

,
,
were separated from,
they were cut off, He-
they were
1. 58. perf.
Arist.

.
Rhet.

4. 2. 27.
1.

I fail
12. 11.
to obtain, miss,
miscarry in.
, ,
c. gen.

,,
has been divided from, 2. 1 7.
I separate by a rope, , \, miscarriage, failure.

, ,
debarred from justice, Dem.l 78. 1 6.
I spend my leisure hours, am
occupied in, Arist. Ethic, x. 6.
,, —
I waste away, Plut. 10. 757.

,
adv. at a distance.
put away, aor»

, , ,,
f. I

f. , I restore from sickness 1. he put by, laid up, II. . 254.


convey safely, aor. I. pass,
rived in safety, Herod. 7. 229.
«tsseret^, I ar- imp.
up, A. 2. 3. 9.—,
. —
laid by in store, stored
I lay by for
,-
f. |a s I order away, separate from

•., ,, myself, treasure up, 6. 1. 11. f.m.

,
others, I station, plup. pass. for while I shall lay

,
were posted, E. 5. 2. 30. I aside, set in their places, 11. . 409. aor. 2.
detach myself from others, bid farewell, m. he laid aside his cloak, put

,
,,
33. —
,
hence

, ,
2 Cor. 2. "is. c. dat. renounce, Luke 14.

pointed, Herod. 2. 69.


ov, set apart, ap-
— down, Od. 500. see Acts 7. 58. imperat.
§.
lay aside, divest yourselves of all
your vices, Coloss. 3. 8.

,
, .
A.
,
Med.

, ,188.

6. 1. 5.

the cattle

hence , ,,
f. ,
I
f.
I rage like a bull,

die away, aor. 2.


were dead, Od.
I intercept

I stretch forth,
,,
.
extension).
am

393.
Luc.
furious,

by a ditch,

2. 83.
aor. .
feathers, Lysist. 578.

punish, fine, Herod. 5. 77.


give a security or pledge,
f.

receive a pledge or a security,


4. 1029. 19.
I pluck, pick

,, I
fleece,
dishonour
Theo.

Dem,
15. 19.
— despise
to
to
1030.
,
177

,
,,
— — — — —

,
, , ,
,

178

,
a settlement or recom- ,, the wear of a thing by long
pense to the wife for her dowry a pledge — use, Dem. 1215. 22.

,
,^,
or security given by a guardian to his pupil,
Dem. 866. 3.
,
, .
,,
.
f.

off the hair, Orest. 128.


, ,
aor. I cut, clip

,
?, an estimate, census, tax. , nursed from home, He-
,
6, , degraded, GEd. .

,
225. rod. 2. 64. educated apart,

f.

f. ,, I
I shake off) Luke
am bold, I dare, Rom.
9. 5.
0. , I
.
wear down, diminish, Trach. 124.
. —

0,
1

,,, , ,
must heboid, must dare. worry, Plut.

,
20. 138.
,
,
5.
f. I —
honour honour debt, eat away, Theo. 10. 6.
f. |<y, I

pay, repay, recompense, 11. 271. aor. 1. . beat with a club, Plut. 6.
I
he hath expiated, Od. a. 43. fut.
that thou art ,
849. put to the torture, rack, A. R. 2. 5. 14.
I form, assimilate.

,
inf. for f.

about to repay me, II. 399. . ,


formation, resemblance,

,
,
I
fut.

,, ,
exact payment for myself, avenge, punish,

,
l.m.
violence,
he avenged,
,Od.

., 312.
thou wilt avenge their
?\.

.
cessary to pay, must honour.
117. aor.
it is ne-
1. m.
Long. 13.

rod. 2.
4.
give over, finish, beating,
40. beat myself,
f. , I
mourn, Luc. 3. 453.
remove, aor. 1. part.
having taken
He-

away

, ,,, ,
for
— removed the
, ,
,
I pay away, repay, remunerate. boundaries, from

, ,
inf. for in the sense 11. .
489. a limit, see
of the imperative, let them repay, II. y. 286. gen. having no feet slow- —
— restore, Od. .
ment, imp.
, 132.
I exact pay-
he recompensed,
footed, lame, Philoct. 641.
,
, absence, Philip. 2. 12. de-
triment, injury, from .

-,
,
,slaughter

-
, , , , ,,
, ,
repaid,U.cr. 393. part,

.
recompensing me for these things,


,
- f. , cut the throat,
I cut
cut from the main body, inter-
cept, II. 7\. 146. for
6, , ill-fated, unfortunate.
shoot off" the bow, pierce,
I
has hit the mark, Luc. 1. 26.
,
, , without drinking not fit
off,
..


73.
late,
f.

use, bring forth,


,
I eat away, devour, Equit. 495.

I hold forth to view— re-


show, demonstrate hold forth for
produce, O. 7. 13.—
aor. 1. m.
myself declare my sentiments produce
an account or estimate exhibit a specimen
— interpret. Ion. 101.
I express


.


8. 8. 7. part. perf.
clearly expressed, advcrbia-

, ,,
, —-
Dem.
for drinking, asses living with- express terms, 1367. 27.

,
lized, in
out water, Herod. 4. 192.
, ,
{- —
,, declaration, de-
At.

,
, ,
, f. I. roughen,

that which is rough, abruptness,


vehemence, Long. 21.
f. ,
turn away from —turn

I
p. pass.
cision
timate,

2 Pet. 1. 4.
an answer of the oracle
Dem.
f.

I fly


>,
1032.
aor. 2.
away, escape shun, avoid,
escape being condemned, am

— list, es-

-, .
aside, reject turn off, avoid, 2 Tim. 2. 5. acquitted, E. 2. 3. 19.
— — ,
-
,
discourage, dissuade— frustrate, E. 6. 3. escape, refuge.
— ,
6.

-
turn away from my design, desist, E. 4.
,,, fitted to escape,

,
n,
l. 10. —
turn back, return, . the means of escaping condemna-

,
5. 1. 12.
, ,
to be turned from tion, defensive means, 8.

,
must avert, direct to another thing. I carry away to be buried, E.
, , turning away, avoiding 4. 5. 4. — carry away a person tribute to the
means of Thuc.
averting, 2. 45. who receives convey, remit, pay,
it, 4. 5. .

,
,
, ,^,
Od.

, , , , ,
, averting a guardian.
372.
f.
,
turned aside, removed from,

,, ,, —
capable of averting, Phcen.
589.— to be avoided, hateful, Ajax, 606.

away, shrink from, II. . 585.


I turn myself
evil, 1 4.

6.—

carry away a letter, deliver, Dem. 824.
carry away a thing borrowed, restore—™
exhibit, represent, Dem. 1208. 6.
aor. 1.
obtain, Dem. 1191. 15.
rate, represent, 1189.
I carry away,
state, enume-
8.

aor. 1. m. part.

^, ,-
aor. 2. f. 2. having carried away for
I run away, O. 11. 18. myself, or exhibited on my part, Ay. 6. 2.
f. -, I wear away, consume, rub aor. 1. pass. he brought himself
off, Theo. 17. —
rub down a horse — back, returned, E.
16.
break, bruise, Od. . 238.
nib off for myself, file away, Plut.
I , Ion. for
3. 3. 1. inf.
to be conveyed

—shake, beat oiF— extenuate.


6. 306. away, Herod. 2. 152. part,
ing brought himself away, returned, . hav-
4.
179
2. 33.

-,
Ion.

f.
,
,
, ,
^,.,
,
,, things brought
away, reported, related, Herod. 1. 66.
I carry away, pay, 4. 6. .
—— —

I strip
,
of
6,
its

jj,

with brass, K. 10.3.


money, Pallad. 48.
one who lives by
, .—
180

,
thou shalt carry away the manual labour, Herod.
,
,
4.— f. m. 3. 42.
prize, obtain,

, ,
Phoen. 1177.
, ion.
Theo. I. — recover,
3.

,, a rent, tax,
save,

,
move an
10.
officer
— rescind,
)6], was set aside.
f.

678. 1.
1
by a public vote, Dem. 676.
aor.
vote against

1. pass, - re-

,
tribute, A^J. l.ll. Herod. 2. 109. exhalation.

,, ,
, ma, aor. 1. I refuse to I lead away in a d liferent chan-

,-
f.


,
assent, deny, 11. 1. 6. 12. refuse, reject, nel, conduct, Pint. 7. 894. Long. 13.
6. 1. 18. I pour away, for

,
, ,, inf. to deny, opp. to he poured out, Od. . 20.
to affirm, Arist. Ethic, . 3.
dissent, refuse, II. y\. 362.
,, , ^,
flow, Ion. 148.
pour from the ground, cause to

, , .
or negation, de- I pour away, Ion. 148.
nial, refusal, negation.
sound, utter forth declare —
,
Od. . 20. pour out.
, , distance, a receipt,
)), *
,,

, , ,
apophthegm

, ,
, , , ,
express myself, Acts 2. 4.


,
oracle.iiwocp^/^iiT/^o^fond

,
,,
of apophthegms, sententious, laconic.

, ,
a remarkable saying,
f. —
aside a stream by means of a dam—
stop,
block up a harbour, E. 2. 2. 2. Plut. 4. 313.
f. , aor. 1 .
f.

I
I

am
turn

suf-

,
am enough, Herod.

, ,
I die away, perish, 31.

-
ficient, 5.

,
imper. for let an- and are used imperson-

-
other perish,

,
for
. 331. pluperf.
II. 3•. 429. aor. 1. pass,
they perished, Od.
for
ally, it suffices, it is
ent,
inf.
Herod. 4. 137.
part,Ion.
enough,
9. 79.
it was suffici-

, , . —
I had perished, Od. 51. part, I content, am sa-
use I am
vog,ibr having perished, dead, tisfied, Herod. 1. 36. I abuse, Dem. 215.8. —

,
,
Theo. 22. 141.

, , ,
462.

, - I wither, die away, perish, Philoct.

I perish, Od. . 110.


— destroy my
sa$3 v„ the abuse of a thing, waste,
decay occasioned bythe use ofa thing, Col. 2. 2 2.
adv. sufficient!}', Thuc. 4. 77.
f. ), I lame a horse,

,
life,

,
lose
-my
I

f.
perish,

,
life, II.

I
II. s.

. 540.
643.

destroy, consume, E. Mat. 7. 23.


disabled,
f. ma,
— secrete, .
I
. 7. 2. 9.
depart from, withdraw,
1. 2. 16.

, ,.
Supp. 1116. f. pass. he will things which pass from the body,
go to destruction, he will go and be hanged, excrements,

,
4. 2. 3.
.
',
,
Here. F. 1290.

. , 7,
jj, departure, 5. 4. 20.

,
blight, abortion, Euro. 187. I separate, divide, rend,
vj,

, , f.

,
,
Herod. I.
f.

86. Pyth. 3. 23.


ana, I take off the peel.
f.

forbidden to be shed, impious


ov,
slaughter, Orest. 168.
or 1 slight, vilify, Acts 15. 39.
6. 14.
-/, f. ,
scrape off, I1. 3. 5.

vote in the negative, con-


I

demn, Dem. 271. 6. absolve from a crime, —


was

.
rent, Rev.

,
,,
,} ,
,
by a fence,
104.
,
.
f. ,
I unload, Acts 21.3.

An tig. 247.—-hem
— shut up the ears or mouth, Luc.
up or obstructed
imp.
I obstruct — fence,
in,
secure
Thuc.
3.
7
broke
8.
585.
acc]uit, Dem. 407. 8. excludeby apublicvote
from being one of the tribe, Dem. 1365. 19.
, , a look out, an aspect, pro-
spect, Herod. 1. 204.
ft ,—
aor. 1. I emit my

,
the ivay, Thuc. breath, expire die or faint through fear,
,/,
a fence, A. 4. 2. 1 5.
ij,
7. 7 4.
Luke 21. 26.— cool or dry by exposing to

-, .

,
f. I blow away, Vesp. 329. the breeze, II. 612.
ov, remote from a cave —

,
unini- ov, inanimate, dull, Long. 42.
tiated, illiterate in mind, scil. voov —
>, ,.
I circumcise, Acharn. 592.

.
,
,
the mysteries of religion were often per-
formed and the lessons of philosophy deli-
vered in caves, Od. . 177.

. 11. 7.
I recede from, Od. . 94.

relax, dissolve,
f. >,
I am
I
\.
Nubes, 760.
take off the bridle
stripped of the bridle,
,without trouble,

,,
trouble, leisure,

out labour, E.

tive, Theo,
ov,
,
,

. ,
sj,

adv. without molestation, with-


6. 4. 27.

16,
ov, undone inac-
3.

12,— ineffectual,
free
2.
freedom from
1 .

11. 16.
from business,
33. ,

II
toil


.
or

276,
— — —

,

,
181
—-incurable, Od.
without

,
successful,

,
effect, sluggishly.
,,
f.

.
),
. 223,—,
sloth, inaction, Orest. 426.
J
1. 6. 6.
do not succeed,

not saleable, Dem. 910. ,


am

.
adv.

un-
, , ov, ,
the want of a patron.
an action brought against

,.
a stranger for living at Athens without a
patron, a, Dem. 940. 1 5.
ov, 6, , not paying respect
to person, judging of a man not by his rank
X 182

,
ov,

,
of trade, Dem. 909. 23.
, a want of sale, a stagnation or wealth, but by his works or moral cha-
•-&',
,,
racter, impartial adv.

,,
,
,,,
5. 40.
adv. unpurchased, 11. a. 99.
,
^•,
uncomely, disgraceful, Theo.
adv. unbecomingly,
, ,
,^.
.
ugliness, al. 103.
, .
,
without respect of person, impartially,

olated, II. r.
1

ov, 6,
Pet.

263.
,
,
1. 17.

,
uncontaminated, unvi-
tzpo-

,
,
inelegance, Arist. Rhet. 3. 6. 2. not using false pretences,
ov,
ov, not mild, rough sea. , but willing and ready, not a shuffler, Ay.
adv. from the roots, (, 11. 13. , — with-
»)— firmly, with clenched hands, Ajax, out shuffling or excuse, with cordiality

.
,
,

, ,
310. at the end of which line for

,-,
i. e.
read
see a similar

.
arrangement in verse S05. It is usually de-
rived from a and
not chosen after delibera-
ov,
tion, Arist. Ethic, g. 8.
out deliberate choice.
with-
without scruple or doubt, E. 7. 3. 7.

4. 55.

right,
-,
unprovided against, Thuc.

Jude
ov,

adv. without stumbling.


not liable to stumble, sure, up-
24. Its. 1. 6.

ov, without wings, unfledged, Here.



,

,
— -
,
ov, not previously deliberated F. 1039. a priv. with large wings, winged,

.
upon,

,
,
.. —
. 8. not provided for by a
decree of the senate, Dem. 594. 23. a,

ov, ,, unwilling, reluctant.


rapid, a augrn.
Lye. 627.

II. 232.
rapidly,

,, , not able to unfledged,


, ,.
6,

fly,

,
/.

,. ,',
6,

, , using words that fasten on

, ., ,
adv. reluctantly, Herod. 7.220.
-, , ,
'

-,
chias, 31.
unforeseen, sudden, Ar- their object, biting,
unawed in speech, .
S.209. ,
or

,.
,
II.

,
without a dowry, a, intrepid, undismayed,

^,
ov, adj. ov,

, , unforeseen, improvident, E. unwarlike,

,
ou, ov, adj.

,
5. 3. adv. heedlessly, rashlv, cowardly, , II. . 201.
. ), — touch

,
1. 4. 21. '
f. I touch with fire,

.
unforeseen, Prom. 1073. light, kindle, for Anacr. ace.

,
ov, 3. c.

sf
,, ,, , inaccessible,
ov, unexpected, Iph. A. 1610.
contrary to expectation,
Isthm.

to, c. gen.
4. 74.
I
—fasten, join, Od.

John
408.
fasten myself upon, touch, cling
20. 17. aor. 1.
.
m.

,
A. 4. 1. 8. adv. unexpectedly. touched him, Mat. 8. 3, laid hold of, 8. 15.
— 17, do not touch,
ov,
,
6, jj, not to be addressed. ptvi 2 Cor. 6.
.
—, ,
or salute, Arist. Ethic,
the neglecting to address

ov, inaccessible,
s. 5.
Nem. 11. 63.
i.

aor.
e. avoid
1. m.
brace, entreat,!!,
— touch food,
65. imp. .
touched
eat, . 60. inf.
to touch the knees, em-

,
ov, inaccessible, 1 Tim. 6. 16. the mark, reached, hit, S. 67. touch an

,, .
18. A. 13. 7.
adv. incomparably, with un-

,
rivalled excellence, Pint. 6. 166.

, ov,

,
unprovided, Dem.
, 1232.
adversary, fasten upon, grapple with, 3° 9.

.
touch a work, take in hand, stick to, II.
358.-— touch the feelings, affect, impress,
engage, Theo. 1. 35.— aor. 1. pass,

, ,
,
ov, unsummoned, said of a per-
son who had a verdict given against him
without being summoned to hear the ac-
cusation,
,, Dem.
for ,, was burnt, blazed, 2. 25.
to burn, Od. . 379.
Olym. 3. 78, he reached the pillars

««-

,
544. 3. ofHercules reached thehighest eminence.

. }, —
not stumbling, upright,
ov, 6, vj, for c. daf. we attain

-,
Acts 24. 16. not causing otiiers to stumble, to, Pyth. 10. 44. having fastened,

,
inoffensive, 1 Cor. 10. 32.

cial,
ov, unforeseen, Eum. 105.

Herod. 1.

ov,

sight- immense, Olym. 2. 128.


65.
unsocial, repulsive.
6, sj,
.
not mixing with others, unso-

ov, not to be taken in with the

.
,
,
,
,
'

,
c. ace.
notice, A.
Od.

ov,

Olym.
.
5. 6.

not

ov, without a gate, E.

open-mouthed, Ran. 862. ,


277.
1

9. '39.
5.

liable
touch a subject, treat,

subject to the touch, tangible.

2
to fail,

-.
sure, fast, a,

5. 4. 20.

1S3
-, ,
, ,,
unfortified.
and
,
without towers,
Od. . 263.
accordingly, then, igitur, ergo, proinde,
and thus it should always be rendered when
184

, ov,

cauldron, 2. 4. 5.
ou, unused to fire, new
— unboiled, . 855. II.
marking an inference in argumentative dis-

,
courses. See Luke 1 1.20. 1 Cor. 15. 15. Rom.

. 7. 21 ; 8. 1. The second
eatables not prepared by fire, as used above,

,,
i.e. vegetables or fruit, Leon. Tar. 45.

—not having heard


unheard of, unknown, Od. a. 242.
is to hold forth the subject as evident, " see
here how we trifle," &c. or " we trifle as you

, ,
. 675. a,
of,

,
unacquainted with, may see." Accordingly Sturze, not impro-
perly, though widely, renders this by " ut

,
Ion. f.

ab, Septem, 132.— tell

,,, , , —
I address, invoke
under the name offather, from the Heb. 3N\
call aloud
nounce celebrate, Pyth. 2. 36.
father, Theo.

an-

15. 13.

patet." When Gobryas first presented his

//
daughter to Cyrus, Xenophon,
thus characterizes her :

and last of all he brought out the daughter,


,
.
5. 2. 3,
, §-

,
unmusical, discordant, Cycl.
vv, adj. behold her possessing wonderful beauty.

,
!

488. f. I do not har- He brought her out the last, as an object


monize, differ from, Plut. 10. 314. the most splendid of all, and crowning the
-/,.
), ,
further off.
at adistance,fromafar.

(,
I force, thrust
furthest, most remote.
), f. —
away, repel an enemy

f.


,
sesrw-
dem.
2. 3,
,
whole. #£oi therefore marks this effect, and
is equivalent to verily, indeed, sane, qui-

what comrades we have, such ve-


!
2. .

,
*
Acts

it is
I
13.
remove myself, withdraw reject,
46.— shake off sleep, Theo. 21.22.
— nvevtslavery— expel,Phcen.76.—
,, ,, necessary to, must reject, Here. F.924.
ov, rejected, disowned, Ajax, 1019.
v„ destruction, Mat. 26.8.
-,
.
have.

,
rily, or, such, I say, are the comrades we
Cyrus when a«child paid homage to
Sacas ; and it is added, 6
1 .
3. 7. but behold Sacas
.

was really very handsome. Here again


arrests the attention as giving the cause of
-

,—
Anthol. i. 43.
adj. to be abjured, to be re-
fused on oath, Antig. 388.

., (and by dropping a) pa, lo, behold


therefore, then, accordingly


sworn or bound
by an oath to the contrary, 394. unlawful,

I say, I

suppose or presume namely, that is to say,




the homage paid by the child, and may be
rendered by since, inasmuch as, that is
to say, nempe, scilicet, nimirum.

. 2. 4. 3,
passed by us.
behold if any other river
In this passage holds
forth to attention the encountering of an-
, is tobe

to wit— perhaps, perad venture, by chance other river, as an event of ordinary occur-
— moreover. rence, and therefore probable : it is here
The
common
particle
origin with
: 6
seems to have the same
and as its use &,
therefore equivalent to perhaps, perad-
fortassis, forte. —
If by chance we
have to cross another river. When a writer

,
consists in inviting the attention of the
reader to the subject of discourse as worthy wishes to be emphatic, he uses to en-
of especial notice, its primary signification force his meaning. This use continually
is that of lo, behold. Thus the flatterer occurs in Homer, II. /3.35,

in Thecphrastus, Char. 2, on seeing his lo having thus spoken, —


having, I say, thus

,
friend eat languidly, takes up a delicate bit,
and adds,
how excellent it is.
&c. II. . 103. but lo
>?-
Jupiter
gave it to Mercury. Under the figure of
the sceptre Homer derives the power of
Agamemnon from Jupiter, and as he wanted
!
! lo this,
spoken. inquam. see also II. a. 583. With this
view, to enforce his similitudes, the same

,.
poet inserts

say,
say,
it
after
thus, I say, Od. . 442.
/3. 4 8 2. J3ij

went the dream—


'
'
went, I say, on Atrides.
,,$\\\,
,..
, —

It
,
16, thus,

may not be

,,
to render this idea prominent, he fixes the unnecessary to repeat that in these and in

,
,
reader's attention by aoa. Again, 6 all similar instances, the primary sense of
zs lo ! —
might be adopted lo the dream went
—-lo it went on Atrides. And this is the
/

,
Syoia IT. more proper, as the intention of the poet's
1. 4. 11. and Cyrus took rue presents ; and language is to fix the attention on the speed
lo he distributed them among the boys,
! with which the dream executed his com-
saying at the same time, See, boys, hcv/ we mission, ' 20. he

Here the first ,


trifle when we hunt wild beasts in the park.
lo, marks the conse-
quence of the grant made by Astyages, and
stood over his head. The impetuosity here
intended was well understood by Virgil,
who thus expresses it, Mn. 4. 702, devolat,
is precisely what we express by therefore, et supra caput adstitit.
—— —— — — — ——
185
, an adverb of interrogation, for # px,

,.
,, ,
, f. |<y, Ion. I hammer,
18

, , ,
whether, nam, nonne, an. It is however imp. for they beat the

, -,
worthy of remark, that though very ground,Vyth.AA02.~ knock atadoor, Theo.
When — pelt —
,
rarely, assumes the sense of 2. 1 59. luith stones strike the head.
Atossa in the play of Persas, 345, asserts , ,, clattering,

,
that Pallas protected her favourite city, the clashing, Cycl. 204.

,
messenger replies, es"' esges

, ,,,,)~
see moreover (Ed. T. 1395.
<?
yes, and therefore the city of
the Athenians is impregnable that it is.
Conversely
interrogatively in the sense of
curs in (Ed. T. 1099.
,

,
But these and such
oc-
web, Theo. 16, 96.
with cobwebs.
, —
ing insect, a spider. Heb. T~\ti, to weave.
,,
a net made by a spider, cob-

, ov —
, , the weav-
I abound

, ", ,
may be presumed,
examples are, it only ing with cobwebs— full of spiders.
— ,
. )
poetic license, to preserve the metre un-
violated.
, a sort of shoes
or boots worn by women, Theo. 7. 26.

,
,
,—
,
adv. with a crash,
Ion.
precation destruction, Od.

,
office, ,
. ,
Ion.
,,,
prayer curse, im-
208.
imprecation, , ,
.

02, , ov, (by syncop. for
II. 3. 2. 1. languid, Long. 34. 4.
adv. slothfully, indolently,
inac-
tive,idle— unproductive,fallow,unwrought,
>, most

' ,,
,,
threat, II. g. 431. 339. . inactively, very slightly, O. 15. 1. a priv.

,,' ,, . ,
I pray pray for good, supplicate —working much, active — quick, stre-
pray for evil, curse, pouring- nuous, a augtn, II. a. 50.
curses, Med. 607. imp. for— a, ov, difficult to be done or encoun-
he prayed, 11. a. 35. c. dat. aor. 1. m. — tered, II. a. 589.— violent, II. . 667.— de-

. 143. they prayed, implored, structive, 544. — cruel, Od. . 399. from a

),
would pray, augm. most crabbed
optat.
Od. a.
pray, Od.
1 64. imp.
. 1 70.
,fut.
for thou didst
(for ,. ,
or morose, Equit. 974.
I am inactive or idle, . 1. 2.

,,
direful curses,

,
, ,,
der barren by a curse.

,
pray for, - ,, ,
inf.
wish, Od.
fr.
. 135, she will pray for
Heb.T"US*,io curse or ren-

Att.
. 322. pass, forms
to
15.— am
ductive

\, ,
or
— unskilfulness

useless, lie as the ground,
I delay, 2 Pet. 2. 3.
unavailing, Long. 9. 10.

from
,,
as arising
— am languid,
inactivity, idleness
unpro-

inertness,

,
,
for
a curse, barren, exhausted, stiff,
part,

a, ov, bound by a curse, cursed, ex-


ecrable, (Ed. T. 656.
bound by
Od. . 2.
Med. 296.

,, ,
, a top or end that
Vespas, 670. a
, a of Peloponnesus.
6,

city
crest.
,
is useless,

, , ov,
cursed, execrable, Antig. 988.
APAI02, a, ov, thin, rare, narrow, (opp. to
broad, deep) slender voice, Theo. —
,,
from Argos of Argos, Argive
oi, inhabitants of Argos, Argives,

the subjects of Agamemnon, and therefore



,
delicate hand -feeble, II. . 411. more immediately under his command than
13. 59.
of the same origin with namely, Heb. , the Achivi or other Greeks, and hence

,
,, ,
Tlfcf,

,
awar.
, rarity, slenderness.

,
sometimes used in contradistinction to
them, II. «.79, though often a general name

,,
,,
,
,
ract,

,
the teeth,
f.

ov,
Heb.

f.
6,

•)
I
q,
,a
make

a clang of arms, clash,


chattering of the teeth, II. ». 375.

Theo.
thin or rare, rarefy.
rarefaction.
Long. 10. 7.
fissure,
(properly the roar of a cata-

I roar, ring, rattle,


22. 126.
,- ,,* ,,,
chatters02,
,,
for the Greeks.

,
,

ov, 6, a famous shepherd with a hun-
dred eyes, appointed by Juno to watch
and slain by Mercury, (see Ovid. Met. 1.)
who on this account is called
, the Argicide.
, ov, white active, quick.




,
,
) ,,
I
Ion. for
have been captured or chosen, part,
\,,&.
taken, elected, Herod. 4. 66 ; 7.
118. plup.

was captured, 9. 102.
xl

,,
II. . 141. .
,
133. . 647.— bright.
being epithets of the wind, of light or light-
ning, came, hence, to signify swift, winged.
, white,
These

I fit, put on, Od. . 23.


-, fair virgin, Anthol. 3. 78.

, .,,,
fit stones to each other so as to construct
with firmness, build, II.
, part,
adjectively, firm
fitly, see
212. per. m. . —
, having fitted,
adv. firmly,
~,,
west wind, U.
white, fleet, an epithet of the
ov, 6,
334.
ov, , rapid, Etun. 181.
.
the winged fleet serpent
white, Septem, 60.
~
— — — — — —a

,
,
, ,
187
] , ^, the white xowa', Isth.
A
songs silvered in
2. 13.
188

,
6,

mud, i.e. clay, hence argiila. face, silver-stamped songs songs whose —

, , ^,
thunder,

,^,
,
, , clayey, argillaceous.
II. r.
, Jupiter
121.
having white teeth, U./.535.
as hurling the livid

,
,
appearance shows that they were composed

,
from the love of gain.
,
a silver vase.
<?£, silver-like, productive of silver.

,,
or swift-footed, II. . 211.

,
E. 4. 8. 32.
white-footed

{log, , Argolica, Argolis, Greece.


I favour, side with the Greeks.
vj, ov, of Greece,
,

),
,
Ho.

Alcest. 679.

,,
4. 3.
ov, bought with silver, a
Herod. 4. 72.

snowy white,
white-woven,
II.
.
. 621. —
(,
slave,

silver-
Grecian.

,-
ov, o, silver— any thing made of
silver, such as money, vase, idol, Acts 17.

, ,
29. chest or coffin,

,
, a
banker, Theo. 12. 37.
,

.
. ,
8. 7. 3.
money changer, a
white.

,
contr.

ov, of the Argo.

477, the ship Argo


those who saile

,,
,
wrought, pearl-beset case, . 50.

Jason sailed for the golden fleece


,

, ,
"
,
, the ship in which
Med.
oi,
,, ,

,,
.
-^,
,
, ,
?^
,,
of
7. 2. 7.

ver, Ion. 1181.


ov
silver, silvery, consisting

ov,
'.
,
a silver cup.
silver mines, Ho. 4. 5.
wrought
ov,

of, inlaid
contr.
of

with,
silver,

sil-
the Argonauts.

Ap^o),
I
f.
, a point, an arrow, Herod. 5. 18.

water, supply with water, aor.
they gave water
—water the
to,
soil, fertilize,
f. —

,
watered, Herod. 5.12.
Prom. 877. — cul-
1. ,,
f.

, , a piece of silver, a silver coin,


,
tivate, cherish, Olym. 5. 55. for ap-
money, . 1. 6. 12.

, , they refresh, adorn, Isthm. 6. 94.

, ,, , a silver cup
xpyvpic, or phial, Olym. wet, or cause to be wet, Theo. 15. 31.

,,,,
,
,, ,
9. 136. imp. for watered, Herod. 2. 13.
a producing a place to draw water,
v\,

.
scil. yjj, soil

,
silver,

bright,

,
Polyb. 34.

II.

trying silver
.

,
,
8. livy.
6,
9.

trafficker in
6,
1.5.
having silver

one who is expert in


money, A.R. 1.
streams,

,a fountain, Lye. 622. II. . 521.


Aohyjv, adv.
Iphig. A. 1588.

, ,, ,
by one

>5;r,ij,Arethusa.the
tain at Syracuse,
APH2,
lift, entirely, altogether,
aloft, Alcest. 611. atpu.

Theo.
117. 1 .
name of a foun-

^,
15. 7.
studded with #?.

,
gen.
, a slayer, from
or by sync.
^,
Mars, the god

,
silver, I1./3. 45.
,,
a collector of money, a — — —
,
of war war, battle the evils of war

^^,
tax-gatherer, Equit. 1068. wound, carnage, desolation.
',—
,
, ,
f.

extortion, E. 1. 1. 5.

-,
smith, Acts 19. 24.
silver
a silversmith.
,
,
^,
I collect money, exact
a tribute from the conquered, E. 1.1.8.
, a collecting of money,
, 6, a silver-beater,

,
work in
the workshop of
I
silver-
,,
,
,.
, .41.
a, ov, or
tial, brave

or

Eur. Supp. 603.


ov, ,

heroic
,

(comp. of
com. mar-
strong walls, U.o.407.
, the hill of Mars where was
held the supreme council at Athens.
ov. slain inwar,Od.
war-spread carnage,
for
,)
better,braver,
,,
,
tj, silver-footed, 11. x. 538. more excellent, nobler, opp. to
rings of silver about the feet were among Pyth. 6. 69.
the articles of dress used by women of qua-
.. .-/], , , , swift

,
brave, va-
in battle,

;, ,,
lity in Asiatic countries,
', §, to run, . 280.

,
liant. II.

silver-footed, 4. 4. 1 3. , loved by Mars, a lover of war,

,.
stream, Here. F. 386. psa.

^^, ,
II. . 766.
,
,

ov, having walls hung with sil-


ver ornaments, Agam. 1541.
bearing a silver bow, Apollo,

shining with silver-light.


,. ,
warlike,

, .— ,

f.
II.

ov,
.
.
150.
136.
undone, not accomplished,

,
c. dat. I unite, coalesce
with another so as to please him, I please
please a leader, obey
oblige — please
please aneighbovr,
the people,
— humour, ingra-
a,

,,
,,
— splendid famine, suid of a scanty
meal served on plate, Anthol. 2. 323.
f. I

Neio. 10. 80. silvered,!,


or presented with silver,
adorn with silver,
e.
- ,,
furnished
kqo-
tiate
satisfy,
— please an injured or offended person,
atone, conciliate, 20.
these things do not please
if
any man, if they do not seem agreeable, if
any do not approve of or assent to these
il. /. 1
— — — — —— — —
189
things, . 4.
API
8. 11.
pleased, satisfied with, Herod. 7. 160. unite
,, ,
,, ,, . I am
much distinguished,
,,
API
Od. . 207.
easily
190
known,

,
to myself by pleasing, appease the gods, Aj. 6, ), profusely weeping.
4. 3. 6. please myself) indulge, f.

=,. — , .
6, ), very conspicuous, xqi,

,
we will settle, II. . 362. satisfy, /. 112.

,
II. 248.
, very manifest, Herod. 65.
^,
iphig.
,
adv. agreeably, si
581. if it be agreeable.
6, a fawner, 7. ...
[, ,,
illustrious, II.
, or , , , much to be envied,
. 318.
8.

adv. di-
,
,,
pleasing, Col. 1. 10. Theo. Char. 5. stinctly, splendidly said.
-, , , , ^^, ,
,
agreeable, pleasing,

or honourable,
manner, acceptably.
,
Acts 6. 2. it is not agreeable, it is not right
adv. in a pleasing

»f, v), (whatever is an object of


guished,

02, ,
ploits,
, 6, ,
most comely, very
II. .
477.
very remarkable, noble ex-
Horn. Merc. 12. Theo. 25. 158.
, a number persons or — —
distin-

.*.

)choice or preference in any thing, from

.
virtue
5. 1. 2.

virtue of the person, beauty,

virtue of the body, health, a

things numbered,

a multitude

^,
amount muster, review, Herod. 8. 59.
sum,

the measure of a journe}r , distance, A. 2. 2.


sound state virtue of the mind, goodness,
. 3.

,. ,
not one in

,
rectitude, moral worth, 2. l. 20.— many, i.e. not even one to be left behind.
virtue in e?wposzYio?2,generosity,beneficence, I number (in contradistinction
1 Pet. 2. 9. A.v. 3. 2. 4. virtue in war, — to I measure, or
I weigh) have

,
,
courage, fortitude, prowess, A. 9. 2. di-
stinction, glory

r.l 14.
f.


/,
faculty.—
I am distinguished, happy,Od.

leadtohonour or happiness,§.328.

,, , ,
an exact knowledge of, in consequence of
numbering, Mat. 10. 30. I am
reckoned, am deemed, classed, Theo.l 7.27.
number, amount, Eum.756.

,
f. f«, I assist, defend, II. x. 77. c.dat. Dor., and
— ward ,
xQ
,
•//,
,/,
off) Troad. 772.
a helper, defender, II. . 7.
6,
CEd. C. 865.
to be numbered, worthy of being num-
bered, estimable, Theo. 14. 48.— easy to be
numbered, few,
,, ,, ), assistance,

,, ,
16. 87.
a helper, II. . 23 5.

, ,,, , skilled in numbering.

-,, ,
,
otpay/, help, succour, U. . 408. the art of reckoning, arithme-
Ao-.vj, a young lamb, Ii. -/. 103. tic adv. arithmetically, by

, ,
,,
adv. (from per. part, of numbering, or by calculation.
— ,
Ao -, ,
xqo>, to fit) compactly, firmly, Med. 1192.
6, one who prays, a priest, II. sagacious, opp. to
without a nose, not
fr. , fit, . 3. 2.

2, , , .
«t. 11. (where is placed the best charioteer, the victor
before on account of the metre,) — the prize of superiority in driving the
chariot, Pyth. 5. 39.
-,
the priest or his priest.
that which entails a curse, execrable. f. I take a meal in the be-
xpy.tov yoov, II. . 37. a deep felt mourning,
a mourning that brings a curse on the cause
,
ginning of the day, v\^i fix, I breakfast
take a meal during the day, dine: and thus

,
..
02,
of it, 741.
^— it differs from to take a meal at the

,
, ,
,
friendship,
f.
o, fitness, from

Prom.
am
1
union,
99.
united in friendship
I
-,,
close of the day, Equit. 812.

xQieov,
I entertain at dinner, Equit. 535.
,
a morning meal, breakfast,
.
am reconciled, II. v. 302.

,, ,
,,
6, a person in union with an-

other, a friend, ally, Od.


a joint, from
427.
to fit
the limbs or members of the body,
Hec. 67. sinews of the mind, Polyb. 18. 23.
the muscles of the mouth, Cycl.62l. the
.


,
^,
lunch —
breakfast upon

food fodder,


9. 1 1. Od. w. 2.
I make a meal,
prepare dinner,
things breakfasted upon, E.4. 5.1.
API2T02, yi, ov, (superlative of ot^/<yz/,)best,
very good— best in form, most beautiful
best measure, wisest —
best in archery, most
--

private parts, Herod. 3. 86. socket of the skilful, II. v. 313. — best in power, highest,
—best
,,
/,
eyeball, (Ed. T. 1301.

-/,,,
muscular, 4. 1. .
f. ohjcj, I join the voice so as to ren-

der it articulate, articulate, Aw. 1.4. 12.


fetters for the limbs.
chief arms, strongest, most useful,
best in birth or rank, noblest
finest, most spirited
best horse,

best in courage,
bravest.«£/5-o; or oi cf^/ro/,the chiefs,officers,
magistrates, opp. to the people the

-,
AntxTivYi, v\, daughter of Minos, see Ovid.

Met. lib. s. Od. . 320.


best things, xhiv -,
adverbially, to sing

, zpi, an inseparable par tide, meaning


very, exceedingly, easily.
..
most excellently, in the best style.

-&», —
ov, Ion. ;/,
etc, preeminence, valour, Ajax, 443.
V ••

the rewaru oi
L 1 1
—— — — — —
91

,,) , , , ,
superiority, the
to superior merit,
, ov,
palm

(best in
— a monument
Dem. 428. 15.
name and not
raised

in re-
adv. sufficiently, competently, ov-

not with less satisfaction,


192

to be gratified

£-'

,
ality,

--.
,
,
,,
to the
left,
left,
left-handed, unlucky,
sc. i. e.
you went
the APKT02,
to be sufficient, Hec. 318.
, 6 or ^ a bear, Od. . 610.—-
a constellation of that name the north. —

,
west, II. 5. 660.

. , ,
,
II. v. 309.

-,-,
cpp. to
, ,
,
to the left, i.
Ajax, 185. £7T
e. plunged in misfortunes,

scil.
to the left wing,
the left hand,
— aj, ov, of the bear, arctic, northern

ern breeze, Agathias, 51.


the frigid zone.
x, ov, of the north, or bear, north-

, ,.
or the best man, a chief.
6, ,
, a star in thetail of the great

,
-,
, ,
xv/\p a leading man, Iphig. A. 28. bear, arcturus, Thuc. 2. 78.
f. I behave in the best man-
ner, act with bravery— achieve —
, q, a net for catching bears and
boars, and therefore the strongest ; and

, )
excel in
strength and valour, Asr. 3. 5. 10. thus differs from . 5. 28.
-,, adv. for superior merit, according

to excellence by a choice of the best, place
,,
where
or
a net is set, K. 6. 6.
,, the

-,,,
Long. § 10. Polyb. 6. 10. -, ov, (superlative of
,, net-

,
,
-,,, ,
born, Pyth. 11.5.

,
^producing the best nobly

am governed by the principal


men,liveunderanaristocratical government.

,
,
, a government composed
of the few principal men, aristocracy.

'
like
1 422,
— a net work,
a strong net-like plot, an inextrica-
ble snare.

K. 6. 5.
,
AopxhiYi, ,
, a person who watches a net,
— a huntsman, ;, a watch.
a small allowance of food
Orest.

, ,-, ,
y,

?.,
tical , /], ov, of aristocrats, aristocra-

;,
the best prophet, the most
6,
adv. aristocratically.
a pittance, Theo.

drawing it, from


35. 16.
, a chariot — the horses
,
to fit, Pyth. 2. 21.
illustrious, Philoct.1 376. of a chariot, a chariot-song,
ov,

, , q, and the
best to labour, the most active, Olym. 7.94.
, Orest. 1385. a triumphal song on the part

,-, , 6 or jj, the most excellent
,,, ,
of the victor funereal, mournful o?i the
part of the vanquished.

, ,
,
,
child, Rhesus, 909. sj, mo-

ther of the noblest offspring, Theo. 27. 72.

-, ,
TSKOC.

-', 6, q, best-handed.
, , a close carriage used by
women of quality, composed of
as we should say, chariot-waggon.
I drive a chariot, Orest. 987.
and

,
ctyoiv, a combat of the bravest, Ajax, 948. ,
6, a charioteer, 2. 2. 27.

, ,^, ,,
', prone to fall, very slippery,
, 7\7\. ride in, drive, a chariot.

,
f.

Od. .
steep,
{^•/, ,
196. ,
, the driving of a chariot.

, &, , , /,

very explicit, quite manifest, ,
, a victory in the chariot
.
.II.
39.
240. shining with light, Theo. 24.
adv. very distinctly, clearly.
race, Pyth. 6. 17.
chariot-rattling, Septem, 188.

,
,
a wheelwright, a coach-

,
,,
hy,

,, ,
x^ac,
oi, the Arcadians.

,,.
, , an Arcadian.

region ofPeloponnesus,Arcadia.
Arcadian.

, . ,, the juniper tree, Theo. 5. 97.


,. ,- , maker, irrr/u, II. . 485.

horses, Ay. 9.
f. r,au,

6.
keeping or maintaining of horses.
,
I feed,
the

, the turning of awheel,


keep, chariot
,

,
— ,

avert
Mat. 25.

ov, to be begun, to be governed
it is necessary to begin, O. 16.

11.— must rule, (Ed. T. 638.


, am
f.

9.
1. I keep off,
aor.
enough, 2 Cor. 12. 9.
I suffice,
kxpovtx, the things
present are sufficient for me, I am satisfied
,. '

,,,,part, of
consistent,
and
, ,,
a rut, II. \l•. 505.
n, ov,

Theo. 29. 9.
or
fitted

or fitted up in a ship, from


,,
for
one united, a friend
perf.

(a thing lifted
atna, or from

with my present circumstances avail, pro-


tect, E. 2. 3. 21. — aid ,,— I am sa-
', fitted) a sail, Theo.
, 6— ,, , a joint, Heb. 12.
— the joining together—juncture— a thing
13. 68.
4.

,tisfied, aor.

,,, ,
,
Long.

oi
9. 4.

ov —
1 . qgx&ruw,

,
11.
I might acquiesce,

sufficiency, succour, (Ed. C. 74.


sufficient,
. 393, it will
adequate.
not be
'
or
join, unite closely,
, ,,,,
joined, a compact form, K. 5.
fastenings of a door, Hipp. 824.

),
hence armus the shoulder, and arm.

aor.
f.

1.
I
29.— the
to

adjust,
Od.
fit.

fit,

e.

sufficient to him, he will not be able. 247, he fitted to each other, imp.
— —a — —
— .

1.93

,, , ,
., ,—
APP 194
for

Pyth. 9. 207.

,,
they united in social union,
governed, Nem. 8. 20. unite in marriage,
I am united

-, ,
, ,
,
unite to myself, receive in marriage, aor. 1.
m. I have espoused, 2 Cor. 1 1.
2. Herod. 4. 65. imperat.
thyself, construct a raft, Od. . 162.
,-,
fit for

•},
,
,plough, I
ov, ro,

,
, —
soil, ground

,,
f.

till,
a plough, Od.

Cor. 9. 10.
1
.
I labour at the

6, a plowing ox, steer, Dem. 53 1

I draw the plough.


v„ a plowed field
earth, II. . 458.

arable land

a measure
S73.

ciety in social
ov,
a person that unites the
harmony, a
members
ruler, a magi-
of so-
6,

',
of one hundred cubits, Herod. 2. 168.
of the fields, rural, rustic muse.
or,, %,
I seize, snatch,

,
f.

A. 6. 2. 8. Eum. 459. carry away with violence, said of wild beasts

,
strate,

,
,,
,
or adv. lately, Theo.
with fitness, fitly.
concert, agreement
), fitness, ,
4. 51. for seizing their prey, II. . 556. or of a plun-
derer, aor. 1. '&,without the augm.
snatched, carried away by force,



harmony character, temper, Hipp. 162.
- Pyth. 9. 9. II. v. 528. Od. o. 250. ^5E«|?,
.
305. — .
~,
,
a regular order, seized, II. rob, steal, 1 2. 6. .

viotv Prom. 566, anticipate, rescue, frustrate, Ajax, 2.


the designs of mortals can never transgress -yh-Av, adv. rapaciously, with rapid force.

the established laws of Jupiter. The allu-


sion is to the harmony of the spheres, by which
each body moves in its proper orbit, and from

,
,,
,— ,,
which none can deviate. ,
,
, ',
, vj, rapine, prey, plunder,

2. 6.— violence, rape, Cycl. 279.


ov, got by plunder —
rapacious.
ov, 6, a thing to be violently seized
1. .

,
,
on.

,,
,,
y\, ov, skilful in music, harmonic.

a, ov,
ro,alamb, John 21 1 5.
ov, 6, a devourer of lambs, a wolf.
, a lamb's skin with the wool
Theo. 5. 50.
of a lamb
\, — a ram, II. .
,
,,
550.
,-
,.

dily, Od.
,,
orgreedily caught at, Phil. 2. 6. seePlut. 6.39.

.
a plunderer, II.

110.
with eagerness. •/
I seize
262. .
a crane as robbing the seed.
voracious — adv. gree-

,,-
, John
f.

1.
I deny, opp. to
20, refuse, inf. aor. 1.

,
m.-
,
Septem, 245, do not
catch at this alarm with loud lamentations.

,,
vwao$&i, to refuse, II. f. 212. imp. The allusion is to hounds pursuing the game
he declined,
,, ,, r. 304. with loud cries.

,
,',
,,,
the denying, Dem. 392. 12.
to be denied, Philoct. 75.
, aj, rapacious, Mat. 7. 1 5.
snatched, to be seized or swal-
ov,

\, ,
, —\
f. I plunge under, dive, II. sr. lowed as a bait, Meleager, 45.
742. urino. ^/\, , a noose, cord,
, a snare, .

, ,
diver. 1. 6. 19.
imp. -/, I get water by draw- ,, , , a sickle— a faulchion,
178. — a rapacious bird, vulture,
Hes. u.

- ,, ,
ing it, from gain, earn, obtain, a. r. 350. II.

— — ,,
0,
159. save, Od. a.
f.

— p.
5. vindicate,
pass,
II. . 446.
Att.
in a physical sense, gusts of
wind, which seized a thing with violence

,
I plow, cultivate, plant, winged fiends, said to have conveyed away

aor. 1. pass. yiqoUyiu, I
2
was planted, i. e. whatever has insensibly disappeared har-

,
,
formed, GEd. T. 1506. (Heb.
ITltt, aro, the earth.)

, , —
in Syr. pies.
6,

,
a pledge, firm assurance,

/, &,
,
plowing land fit for plowing, Heb. ]mi7, 2 Cor. 1. 22.
arable land, II. . 576. . 541.
— , a plowman — , unsewed. ,
, , or \, ,
John
, 19. 23.
a

,
ov, (for
,) —
,
tiller.
who

, ov, 6,
Trach. 69. Od.
aporai,
cultivate or court the muses.
plowing
/. 122.
Nem. 6. 56,

— the plowing season,


those transposition of
^, adject, male,
,, , ,
of no moment,
.
II.

ov, unbroken, not to be broken


a male, opp. to %-
451.
, .
masculine.

.
ov,

ynv
(adjectively)
rivet,
178, that the soil when plowed should
plowed,
scil. ,, (Ed.
unbroken bonds, strong, indissoluble— un-
broken fortress, impregnable, U. f*. 56.
unbroken dispute, undecided, strongly con-

not yield to them any fruit. In the next
clause, these terms are to be supplied,
, tested,
wounded
II. v.

— unbroken
37.— unbroken in body,
in mind, invincible,

un-

,
ovj aporov y/jv nor undaunted, Theo. 25. 112. a cloud not
moreover the conjugal soil yield children, to be broken, thick, impenetrable, II. o. 20.
see verse 1210. Pint. 6. 544. — hail not to be broken, large, ponderous,

/,,},
ov, friendly to plowing, Apollo.
ov, agricultural life, Anthol.2. 121.
Theo. 22. 16. a voicenot tobebroken,ever
durable, inexhaustible, U. . 490. , .
— — — —

,
195

,,
APT
adv. without being broken.
to be firm, Lysist. 182.
a$w object
Herod.
APT
when equal or ready for it, prepared,
A thing is even with its end
196

,,
9. 27.

,lamb,
, Theo. 25. 83. not mild like a
fierce, a,
(a priv.
ov,
.)not to be spoken or
when
grown into
perfect,

eog,
perfection.
complete, sound, mature,

sound, perfect, II. 308.

,
r,.


,divulged, forbidden
12. 4. —
,
sacred, awful, 2 Cor.
unspoken, Od. f. 466.
6, }j, a basket, Aves, 1309.
ov, not fitted, without symmetry,

/,
,,
,
number with Apollo, they being
Diana as making an even

adv. the time past even with the


present, recently, just now, lately the time

twins.

, ,,
unharmonious,disproportioned— present even with the past, now at length.
adv. without neatness, clumsily, Plut. 5. hag ctprt, until now. , from this
,,
,, . ,
, ,,
152. inelegantly.
11. Hipp. 529.

I
for
,
from avapyo-
draw up, pump water, Herod. 6. 119.
see Aw. 3. 10. time, henceforth.


I play at even and odd, Plut. 817.
I make even with, ascertain,
ot>,
34.
a play at even and odd, A.
.
.
,, . . ,
unshrivelled, fresh apples, R.

, ,
ov, 3. 5. 4.

&,
Philip. 11. ,
A^ptAea, o^pahea, f. ,,
I dread, shudder at,
,
eog, recently watered,
recently born, infant cries, Sep-
shrink from, Herod. 1. 80
Ion.

-, ,
,, ,
a^pahia,
dread, horror, 4. 140.
broken, craggy, a augm.
6, , infirm —
,

sick, Mat. 14. 14.


tem, 342.

eg,
,
is not so proper.

6, jj, recently married.

recently born, very young, 1 Pet. 2. 2.


ov, and -

,-,. ,
-,
sluggish in mind,

,
30.
I am sick or infirm, 3.1 1.10.
to, infirmity, ,.
. 4.
^,,,
«grryA£(p>7£,£o?,recentlywrought,Theo.Ep.4.
recently weeping,
Med. 903, how prone to weep
-
.
,»» ,
,
upjaria,
gen.
malady, infirmity, 4. 2.
6 or vj, a lamb, II. %. 263. ,,
am

\, ,—
I of late become !
£oc,recently informed, fresh taught.

, , .
apya, the gold-fleeced lamb, Eur. speaking what is fit, undisguised,

,
,
Elect. 704. see
AP2HN, or •/,
valiant, Plut. 6. 390.
apyiv.
ev,

,,
a male, masculine,
the love
lsth. 5. 58.
f. ",
specious,
I make
lead a dance, Theo. 13. 43. instruct.
II. .
281.
even, fashion, finish,

, ^,
of males. eog, recently blooming, fresh.

,
, ,,
masculine, male, Exod. 23. 17.
or ', a cata-

mite, sodomite, koityi, 1 Cor. 6. 6.


male offspring, vigorous.
,
,
-,
^.
recently dead, Alcest. 602.
ov, recently formed, Trach. 781.
fresh information, Septem, 379.
,
6, , having recently learnt,

,
,
,
,
tion— a thing

,)
Att.

,
,
6, , feet-lifting, fleet hares.
vj, the
to be raised, a load,
lifting

6, (a cutter of bread, aprog,


a cook, butcher, Lye. 236.

up — eleva-
,.
^
,,, ,
just surprised with evil tidings, Hec. 685.

, ,
,, ,
,
Theo. Ep,

opp. to
3.

, having
newly fastened,

sound in
II. /. 501.
feet, sure-footed,

, , ,
f. ma, I cut bread act as a butcher
or cook, Ear. Elect. 815. I kill—carve
lacerate, Alcest. 497.

I hang upon,

,
rather 6,
lately
just
reared, or recently fed, said of virgins quite
young, but full grown and exposed to the
produced.
, ,

, .-
f. p.

,,
-, .
cause to suspend, Androm. 803. Hipp. 1217.

is ctpreu,

,, , ,
I hang over an object, am pre-

paring for depend upon. The Ion. form
see Herod. 5. 120.
7j, a halter, (Ed. T. 1289.
,$'\.
lust of the conquerors, Septem, 335.

,
?-,,
,..260.
newly sprung, 176.
newly planted, fresh blooming.
recently tinged, Trach. 700.
ov,

, ,,
6, the top sail, so called as
suspended by ropes, Acts 27. 40.
)
APT02,
, -,
bread, loaf, food,
coarse bread,
6,

,
aery/net, a thing suspended, a pen- (for Theo. 21. 45, every

, ,
dant, ear-ring, Herod. 2. 69.
,,
dog dreams of bread in his sleep.

, ,
artery, the wind-pipe.
APTI02, a, ov, fit, suitable, even. This epi-
thet expresses one thing as according with

, , ,
another. Thus, one number coalescing with
another makes
., an even number,
baker,
, , a grinder of corn,
A.
,,,a
6,
n,
4. 4. 13.
of bread.
, , a baker, .
, the
seller
5. 5. 10.
making of bread, bak-
miller,

opp. to

, , odd. II. f.

92, to speak things suitable to the occasion,


appropriate, ju.it, A person is even with his
ing,

f.
2. 7. 6.
I eat bread,

.
f.
6. 2. 11.

3
I prepare
— — ——— —— — —
197 X 198
,/, , -,
,adjust

,, ,
,, ,, ,
,,
,

I fit, condense, Herod. 1. 12.
contrive, feign, Od. 865.
store savour, Mark 9. 50.
imp.
.
I season, re-

he con-
— the lead
f.

over, Herod. 2. 133.


f.
I

I preside,
begin, S. Elect. 83. take

6, a ringleader,author, Acts 3. 15.

,
', .

, , a chief or high priest, oi xo-


certed for himself, II. 55. was
. the heads of the sacerdotal families.

,
restored, consolidated, 216.

^,
daurijPlut. 7. 171.—

, , ,
,
a seasoner seasoning.
oiv, o/, magistrates among the Epi-

courts
or sessions of such magistrates, Thuc. 5. 47.

,,
,
,'
, ov, belonging to the chief
priest, of the high priest, Acts 4. 6.
,
h, the high priesthood.
,
, chief of the deputies an-

.
xpvtu, f.
1.3. 8.
I draw water exhaust,
I draw for myself

,
,
nually sent to Delos by the Athenians.
f. ma, fulfill the office of, act

-, ,
I am drawn.

, ,
\,
11. —
6, a liquid measure containing
one draught, Herod.
,
2. 168.
,
beginning,

the first cause, author, II.



for
from the beginning— the first, John 2.
100.
xp-

. , ,
as a, chief deputy, Dem. 552. 4.

%\^,, ,
:, ,
, captain of a banditti.
, a chief pilot.
one who leads a wandering
band, the leader of an expedition.
,
6, a prefect or president

, . ,
source the first or highest power, sove- of the synagogue, Luke 8. 41.
reignty, government —
a person who go- , a master builder, archi-
verns, a ruler, magistrate, Rom. 8. 28.—
^- \,

, .,
tect, 4. 2. 10. f. I

,
persons governed, and constituting a com-

',
,

munity a subject of discourse,
verbially, for Kotr

ties, Tit. 3. 1.
from the begin-
ning, from the first, altogether,

,
, chief of
first
ad-

1. 2. 8.
extremities, principalities, authori-
— principles.
angels, archangel.
,
act as a master builder, plan
, ,,.

,
,
, chief workmanship, architecture.

art— architecture,
nc, v„ scil.
Arist. Ethic,
, , a chief publican or farmer
of the revenues, Luke 1 9. 2.

-, ,
6, master of the feast, r^;-
the master-
a,. 1.

Polyb. 1 9. .
x, oify ancient
at first, formerly
the former price, Tlo. 3. 2. ra upcast,
— former—veteran,
, a dining-room, John 2. 9.
,
, a chief of those who
bear shields, captain of the guards.

, .
,
,
,
,
,
things antiquated, obsolete, silly, Prom.

,
818.

,
—the principal, Equit. 13. 87. oi xp-
the ancients.
adv. in ancient times, formerly.
I give an account of ancient
times, Thuc. 4. 69.
account of ancient times —
, % an
antiquities.

,
,

horse
,
6, the chief of a tribe,

captain of a ship, or pilot



, a chief commander of an army
master of
prince of birds, the eagle, Pyth. i.
13.— chief of the sailors, Od. . 629.

A. 2. 6. 5.

,
,,
skilful in, or fit for, commanding,
the principle or

,
formerly born, aged.
ov, 6, q, office of ruling, O. 21. 2.
or ov, anciently f. ), I set in order, arrange, Hen,

};, ,
gotten wealth, hereditary, Again. 1052. "PJ7, Pyth. 3. 7. command, rule, take the
-,

, ,
to be revered for its an- lead, begin, A. 1.4. 14, imp. he went
.

,
tiquity, venerable, Prom. 410. before, began, II. 391. imperat. &»%%
ov, turning or pointing to an-
tiquity, antiquated, Thuc. 1. 71.
,
\, an assembly called comi-
begin,
begin,
gen. inf. xpyj^zvai, for
c.
154. nor. 1.
v. , to
optat. JEol.
, they might begin, II. . 335. ofier, —

,
tium for electing officers and magistrates

, I hold a court or assembly

,
of the people— speak in, send deputies to, ,,
,,
c. dat. Isthm. 6. 55.
I begin, c. gen. A. 1. 8. 12. azoV
I will begin with thee, II. /. 91.

,
,
,
such assemblies,

, ,
,,
Polyb. 26. 10.
, a just governor, Nem. 1. 96.
a government house, E. 5. 4.
aor. 1. m.

,,
he took a beginning to
himself, he began, Pyth. 4. 409.
is often used by way of circumlo-
or

,
58.— tribunal,

evil, II.
the offices of state.
ov, 6, a first mover or author of
i. 63. ,
cution, and ma} be rendered

.
r

having begun with


7. 5. 18,
adverbially,
'
^, , ,
thee a child I wished to become thy friend

,
ctQXixoTuc, sovereign of the state, Pyth. 9. 92.
, a model, archetype. —
to,
\,
I wished to become thy friend immedi-

u<>xivo,

-^/;, Dor.
f. lead, command,
I 200.
, leading the chorus, Troad. 151.
, , leader,
(Ed. . 770.— conductor of a colony— au-
thor, founder.
II. e.

&
ately from thy youth.

,
he began to
go, for he immediately went, II. v. 829.
xv tic II. 1. 1. 5,
wherever any one should begin to go, for
wherever any one should
02
— — —
199

, , ASA
go, beginning thence as a central point.

. indeed I begin to
11. 8, thus
§- -, ov, (,
or , A 2
not to be
put out, (said offire which cannot be quench-
ed till its subject is completely consumed)
) 200

worship the gods, thus I first worship the —


vast, unquenchable unfading glory, Od. .

,, ,
gods, or worship them above all things

.
am governed, obey the rule of another,
2. 1. 10,— offer, c. ace. II. r. 254. hence
,
for
offerings, Od. | 446.
.
— part.
beginning, com- ,
,
,, ,
548.— unquenchable laughter,
able battle,
violent.
, , bitumen, Gen.
,,
599,<~
loudrepeatedpealsof laughter— unquench-
raging— unquenchable storm,

31. 3.
II. a.

mencing, Herod. 1. 174.


^,,
. 1.2. 1.
,
6, one who rules, ruler, chief,

,
', a man in authority, , , , , , or
,,
am
c.
tinged with soot.
s.
soot.

having no
opp. to
A pa,
part.
f.

lids, cover,
, a private person, 5. 2. 11.
or >, I fit, join, aor.
having fitted with oars, fur-
nished, Od. a. 80. imperat.
.
353. aor. 2. Ion.
fit with

»,
,,
., fear or reverence of the gods, (It
applied
of God
differs
to

, ,)
one who grossly violates the laws
or the dictates of nature, and thus
from or
ous, profane, unnatural, 1 Tin). 1. 9.
impi-
is usually


.
or agae>ov, had fitted, II.

,,
105. or clothed
in, c. dat. II. . 210. fitted with food, satis-
^,
.
,
1. 2. 2.

decency or modesty, Plut. 10. 707.


adv. impiously, without

fied,
60.

pluper.
Od. s. 95. p. in.
was pleasing to us,
fitted itself,
was determined upon by us, Od. . 777.
or «gjjge/, was fitted to, suited
his hand, II. y. 338. was fitted with stakes,
thickly fenced with them,
, , , ^,.
56. part,
is fitted, Prom.

-,
,
,, . ,,
subj.

1. 4. 8.
,
, the want of reverence towards
God, impiety, profaneness,
f. act impiously,
they be impious, plup.
if
had committed an impious act, E.

, an of impiety.
irreligion.
22. fut.

,, .
vtot, fitted, firmly joined or act
tied, compact, plur. having fitted, , , unharnessed, ungovern-
vj,

,,,
1. pass, ,,
for ,,
wedged themselves together, II, v. 8Q0. aor.
they were con-
densed, or wedged themselves, II, ir. 211.
,
properly plowing, or a
piece of plowed land, fr. Pax, 1158. ,
^ ,
able, Ion. 1150.

23.19.

,
,
,
wanton, lewd, insolent, Dem.
adv. wantonly, Dem. 1 20. 1 0.
;ei,j«i,wantonness,petulance,Dem. 131.
I indulge in lewdness, act inso-

.
— fiow ers or plants growing in
r

,
lently, Dem. 1257.

, ,

,
a cultivated spot. Hence came to

,
6, %, moonless, Anacr. 3.

,
signify simply the sweet odour which plants ov, c. irreverent, undignified.
or flowers emit, especially when burning on

, .,
irreverent towards the gods.

,,
,
,
the altar, spice, perfume, Mark 16. 1.
smell of spices, emit odours.
,
ov, fit
ov, aromatic, odoriferous.

unloaded, uncompressed, soft,


ov,
.
for plowing, Antig. 575.
x. 485.
act irreverently, commit impiety.

ov,
ov, undirected, unprotected, II.

and
stamped— unemblazoned,Phcen.
, unmarked, un-
11 ^.mo-

,
O. 19. 11. unpacked,

,
ov, not a man of Salamis, not

, , ,,,
an expert sailor, such as the Salaminians
were, Ranse, 206.
ov —
ov,
,
untossed,
,.
, dest—obscure, uncertain, indistinct, (Ed.
C. 1739, Hipp. 269.

643. ,
adv. indistinctly, ambiguously, Prom.

tice, K. 3. 4.
without a track, sign or no-

,
unagitated, as troubled water, immoveable,
lasting, Heb. 12. 28. Bacch. 388.
— ocaeihsvta;, adv. without agitation, im-
,
22,

,,
, vf,

ov,
satiety, loathing, disgust.
not liable to
c. s
rot.
-, s. ,,
,
weak
— weak

,
moveably. weak in body, infirm, sick, feeble
,,a
,,
cistern, bath, Od. q, 90. in frame, brittle, frail, weak in numbers, few,
, without sandals, Bion. 22. . — weak resources, poor, un-
19. in

,
1. 1. 6.


ov,

,,
void of
,
not
9j,

,
flesh, lean,
leanness.
clear, indistinct
K. 4. 1.

— uncer-
a,

, ,
protected — weak principle, unconfirmed,
doubtful,

,, Cor.
Rom.
15.—
5. 6.
adv. weakly,
in
— mean, contemptible,
.-
,
1 1.

,
,,
tain, (Ed. T. 447. q, indi- to be weak, to be sick, ,
stinctness, obscurity, uncertainty. f. I am weak weak in body, am —
adv. indistinctly, K. 3. 10. —
sick, infir.nl• weak in mind, am timid, cow-
(a new verb from the fut. of —
ardly weak in mind or in principle, am
aha, to satiate) I am satiated, I loathe, doubtful, unconfirmed, Rom. 4. 19.— weak
Theo. 25. 240. aor. 1 sub^. aaauii^ he might
. in circumstances, am destitute, unprotected,
satiate or clov, Herod. 9. 41. 2 Cor. 4. 9.
— —— — — — — ———

,
201
ctafevrifABt, , A2
a weakness, Rom. 15. 1.
,,
ro,
weakness of body i feebleness,

,,.,
uffxtiTfov, it is
2. 1. 29.
A 2
necessary to exercise,
202
.
.
,
sickness, opp. to joa^—-weakness of mind,
cowardice, effeminacy, opp. to or , ,,
men, 457.
7. 5. 26. p.
ro, discipline, exercise, regi-

a severe regimen to which

,
q,
I render infirm, break down the the combatants submitted with a view to
.
,, ,
strength, weaken, 1. 5. 3. the public games, training, At. 1. 2. 27.

,-,, ,
,
breath, hard breathing, ov, 6, a man inured to discipline, a

.,
,, , ,,
panting, asthma, II. o. 241. severe disciplinarian an experienced prac- —
,.
I pant, gasp, II. s. 585.

,
, Asia, or Asia minor.

titioner.
, ov, fitted to exercise, ascetic.
acquired by practice or disci-

,
ij ov,
belonging to Asia, Asiatic, 23. — curiously wrought,
,
pline,
, .
1. 2.

,in Lydia,

, ,
sounds of the lyre, this being invented

,
Thesm. 125.
, a native of Asia.
adj.
, prefect of Asia, Acts
polished, adorned, Theo.
without a tent, ,
ov, 6, ,
ov, without a shade, unshaded ren-
dered desolate, i. e. stripped of its trees,
1. 33.

, ,
19. 31.
not silent, sounding, Call. 286. Anthol. 3. 247. priv. having much shade, —
,
4.
— , .,
/,
«, aiyn
, q, loquacity. well shaded, augm. Nem. 6. 73.

, 6, , without a stick.
ov, unpointed with iron, unarmed.
, , a sort of yoke put across the ov, 6, iEsculapius, a physician,

,
,,

1. 7. 32.

,,
-
shoulders to carry certain things, Arist. Rhet.

not hurtful, unhurt, Od. 109. .


and disciple of Chiron
a son or descendant of iEsculapius—
\~, or ro, a temple ,
ov, 6,

,
adv. without hurt, without injury. of jEsculapius.
,
21, scum, slime, mud, II. 321. . inconsiderate, II. . 157. —un-
, , ,,
q, ov,

, —
,

,
without food, hungry,

,
f.

,
6, , (pen. long) fasting, unfed

I abstain
Od -. 768.
from food,
expected, Ajax, 21. u viewed, (Ed. C.
1680.
lessly.
adv. inconsiderately,heed-

,.
I fast, am witboutjdining, Hipp. 277. ov, 6, a leather bag or bottle used to
,, the want of food, abstinence, carry wine, Mat. 9. 1 6. 6

,, , ,
, ,
fasting, Acts 27. 21. a wind-bag, a pair of bellows.

tlO.
, , , ,
14. ,

bed, Nubes,
ov,

ov,
unweeded, undressed, Theo.

A«fl^iel?yr}7?,oI;,o,anevetorlizard,Nub.l70.
6, or
633.— a pillow, Anthol.
having eyes fixedly open,
ov,
,, , a pallet-
2. 179.
the oar was hung to the

,
,
a loop of leather by which
or a
round piece of wood, when the rower rested
from his labour, Ranae, 367.
rx, a festival of Bacchus in
which it was customary to jump upon

, ,.
not winking, Equit. 292.
adv. without winking, with fixed eyes,

,, /,, .,
.
swelled leather bags for
xKhopxi, I jump upon the leather bag,

,
1. 4. 28. Plutus, 1130.
or , unwounded, un- ,, ,
a song, ballad,

,,
hurt, Od.

, ,
. 255. , $, to cut, scathe. ov, 6, one who deviates

, . ..
,
/, ) having no limbs, immoveable from the proper tune, Nub. 333.

,
Od. part, of

,,
adverbially, incessantly, x. 68. y\, ov, (for will-
adv. without intermission, II. r. 68. ing, glad, . 3. 3. 18. adv. will-

, , ,

, , .,
ov, unsmoothed. ingly,^. 1. 23.
ov, 6, q, uncovered, , I act cheerfully, I feel glad, Po-
ov, unconsidered inconsiderate, — lyb. 4. 11. 5. Pint. 6.
rash, Eccles. 258. 4. 2. 19. 384, they are glad in eating, they eat with
,
.
adv. inconsiderately, rashly,
— ,
gladness.
— unin-
., ov
rod. 3. 131.

2,, ,
2, ,
unfurnished, He-

unprepared, (Ed. C. 1084.


, 6,

structed, refractory, Ephes.


,,
v\, unwise,

folly, stupidity, Plut. 2.


/,
3. 9. 4.
5. 1 5.
788.

cise,
polish

;,
, .
f. p.
bour, Acts 24. 16. train, discipline, exer-

,
8. 1. 13.— cultivate, adorn, dress,

teach, institute

,, ,
I train,

wkyikx, I practise la-

greet, Rom. 16. 3.


(from the Heb.
2\/, a lip) I salute, embrace, welcome,
impressed
with the lips, recommended, introduced,
f.

, ,
discipline myseli I am trained, disciplined, Anthol. 2. 220.
, ,
/, .
inured.csj^e
plished man,
, ov,
3.
to be exercised,
a disciplined, accom-
13. 6.
. 5. 3. 16.
tion, greeting
,
6,

ov
— caresses, Hecub. 831.
— to be saluted,
ov,
saluta-
— — — —

,
203

, ,
welcome,
,
^^, ,,/,
II. .
AST
35. adv. cor- not Sowing, Iphig. T. 1241.
A 2


priv. —
£04
fast-

,
dially, with welcome, Theo. 16. 7. dropping, augm. adv. in
, op, disposed to salute, affable. drops, copiously, CEd. C. 1315.
&,,

, , , ,,
f. xoa, I quiver, gasp in the agonies unstable,
of death, II. y. 293. Herod. 8. 5. Dem. 383. 5. infirm, fkkle.
ov, 6, aspalathus, the white thorn. the uncertainty, Thuc. 3. 59. uncertain, —
ov, 6, the asparagus. Orest. 979. Long. 22.
ov, unsown, , Od. /. 123. the most uncertain or least to be depended
ov, , , one with whom no treaty upon, Dem. 383. 5. wandering stars,
. .4.
,
^ .can be made, perfidious, Dem. 786. 10.

272.

- -,
contrary to the faith of treaties, Plut.
,

, .
ov,
,,
without seed, II. v. 303.
1.
7. 5. not firm or valid reason, ,
f. >,
I am unsettled, have no fixed
abode, 1 Cor. 4. 11.
ov, free from commotion, undis-

,
turbed by a change of inhabitants— settled,

,,
urgent, incessant

~, , . ,

,
. 32. aug.ro-gggoi.

, . ,
adv. incessantly,
ov, not to be expressed. vast,
407. II. 3. 554. or ,
..
Thuc. 1. 2.

, jj, a grape expanded, a raisin.

, an ear of corn, II. . 148.

, 6. 14.
ov, without spots or stains, 1 Tim.

a venomous serpent, an asp,


ilox, £,
Rom. 3. 1 3. t)BVJ s in the form of ?.
,
ov, uncovered,
account ofbeing unsheltered,
as being without a covering or shade, Thuc.
7. 87.
A2III2,/&?s•. a shield, scutum, sa*'
to the shield, to the left or the side on
, A2TEI02, x, ov, of a city- well bred-
comely, polished, yv &g»,Aets 7.
which the shield lay,

'',
7. 5. 3.
men bearing shields, Herod. 5. 30.

^, ,;, one who


.. ,.
.

.
20, he was comely to God while Moses
was comely in the sight of men, he pos-
sessed also those graces of the mind which

,
throws away

,
-,
his shield, Vespse, 590.

shields

,
ov, 6,
ov,
were made, Dem. 945.
, a shop or
554.
shield-clad, , &,
,, II.
office
15.
.
where
rendered him comely in the sight of God
— witty, facetious, opp. to

ov,
politely, facetiously,
untrodden, Philoct.2.
,
fr.

x,
. -sita.

-;
, ,,, ,.
, , unmoved,
ov, shield-sounding,Isthm.l.31.
ov, one who has a shield,
ov, an epithet of the armed
. or
steady, resolute, firm, II.
13. 37. adv.
. 344. brave, Theo.
immoveably fast.
men who sprang from the serpent's teeth not to be borne, intolerable.
ov,
sown by Cadmus. But the true reading free from groans or sighs, cheer-
,
seems to have been teeming
or springing up with shields. Thus it an-
swers to what the scholiast properly says,
ful day, Hec. 691.
i«,oj/,must be sung,
ov, 6, q,
,
Nubes,1207.
uncrowned, unadorned
" bearing shields and not ivy." See Phoen. ,

,
with garlands, Heracl. 441.

,
-,, ,
802, and the words of Ovid, Met. 3, 110,

, , ,
AoTioywuo, Dor. ooo;, disdain-
ing a man for a husband and aspiring to a

, .. ,
crescitque seges clypea virorum.
ov, , God, ambitious, Prom. 929. , xvnp.
,,

,
shield-bearing,expertindefending,Ajax,566. implacable, Ajax, 787.

,
at,

-.
. ov, having no bowels, cowardly,

,
,
Ajax, 472. uncompassionate. x, ,
a star, a constellation.

, ,, , ,
one with whom no treaty
ov, 6, tj, , , starry, 575.
or covenant canbemade,implacable,Rom.
1. 31. Dem.
ov,
314. 16.
unsown, ,
priv.
Dem. 279.4.
,, ,
having the form of a star.
stany, II. . 44.
ov, , a mark prefixed to certain

,, ,,
,
,
'
trouble,

( ,
for
,
or

., xnvx, whatever
half the as, a Roman coin
adv. without hurry or
II. 0. 512.

things.
conspicuous verses (*) asterisk.

lightning
07•/,,
;, sj,
— any reflected lustre,
-r,, a flash,

he who causes the


1!. *: 154.

,
ov, to, ov, 6, light-

:,
, ,
,, ,
Mat. 10. 29.

—, , .
equal to about three farthings of our money,

,, ; a title of Minerva, from the


ning to fly or to
thunderer, sr\ Jupiter, II. x. 580.
illumined with stars,
fly), the

: ,
ov, star-like, bright, Ion. 1079. ;-^.
Heb.\L>'u\S\ asis, strong, brave, Herod.1.19.
-
,
,
T

,nearer,
.
Aew«/, adv. nigh, near, comp. of
becomes
c.


,, as
adverbially,
very near.
, so:,
becomes

not dropping,
1137. A. 13. 8.

uncovered, uncrowned, Dem. 331. 3. Hipp.
,
ing, 2 Pet. 2. 14. Lon^. 2. 2.
-,
ov, unconfirmed, unstable, waver-

&.
ov,
— — —

,
205

, ,,
, , untrodden,
AST
the boat of Charon
solitary, Ajax, 666'. f.,
study their laws, Nub. 194.
,.„
AST
I contemplate the star%
£0(5

,
untrodden by Apollo, e. unvisited by the a knowledge of the

,
i. stars,

,
7,,
, ,
light of the sun, opp. to the real boat dedi-

-,
cated to him by the Athenians, Septem,865.
ov, unrobed, unadorned, , -.
astronomy,

v\, ov,
4. 7. 4.
ov, star-faced, starry, Her. F. 406.
shining as a star.
,-.

,
,

ov, having a tender mouth, K.3.3. ov, unlevelled,Herc.I* .52.


-— uncurbedjS.Elect. 726. untraceable, -. A2TT, ,, —
a city the city ofAthens.

.
, ,,/,
ov, without sighs or groans, silent. ov, 6, crying through the city, a

, SscjQilx,
6 oY
Septem, 856. an enallage for
to agree with ,
the

.
city crier, II.
,. 701.
, «?, situated near the city,
neighbouring, E. 1.3. 2.
\,
,boat of Charon is conveyed by rowing with- f. I run to and fro through
out the dashing sound of other oars, u, the city, overrun, plun-

,
/,
,,,,
,,
ov, a citizen, a helpmate, II. . 242.
,fa a female citizen.
the city, city-crott>i£,Plut.3.S8.
ov, 6, , devoid of natural affection,
— ,.
,,
,
dered, Septem, 207.
or «., n, ov, belonging to the
city, town-people, Eum. 1000.

,,
Theo. 20. 4.

,
polished, —

,
Theo. 17. 43. unnatural death, ov, 6, triumphant, surpassing in
ov, one who misses the mark, erring excellence, Eum.
918. voty.

,,

, f.
adv. without aim, injudiciously.
I miss my aim, err from the
right mark, 1 Tim. 6. 21.

,, ,
Nem.
oy,o,regulating the city, polished,
9. 73. officers at Athens
who took care of the streets and aqueducts,

,
*,
,,,,
a pillar, Olym.
q,
,
2. 1
error, miscarriage.

.
the want of a judicious aim.
not to be turned aside, firm as

',
46.

- ,
,
,
an ankle, knuckle — the
Dem. 735. 10.

office of
1 am a police officer, or fill the
Dem. 1461. 11.
protector of the city,
ov, 6, q,
which has tor its object
said of a solicitude
,

,
ov, 6,


^, , ,
pastern of a beast dice, .-. the welfare of the state, Agath. 43. sur-
88. the vertebrae of the back. rounding the city as a wall.
unsupported with pillars.

,.
I play with dice. ov,

,, , playing with dice, A.R. 1. 11. 15.


, or , lightning, a
ov, not rugged as stubble, but level
as a laiun, Antiphil. 28.

,,
flash —a meteor, Luke 11. 36.
, ov, undisturbed, A. quiet,

,,
1 5. 7.

, ,
I flash, lighten— reflect a

,,,,
f. Call. 4. 26.
.
glaring light, Luke 17. 24. 6. 4. 1. 6, , one who has no sym-
, ,-
?,
uninured to the army, Pint. pathy for others, severe, cruel,
, Dem.
&. 173.

,
one who refuses to serve
,
Dem.
the refusing to serve in war.
533. 10. Equit. 443.
in war.


,
, . 547. 8.
ov, inexcusable, Long. 3.

ov, not coalescing, repulsive-,

,
-Toc, ov, not turning. ov, discordant, Pallad. 72. ,
Theo. 24. 94. to depart
without turning the face aside, return with
.
,,, ,
.
ov,

,
incomparable, Plut. 6. 509.-
ov,ungathered /hiite, Unripe,

there is no return, Lye. 813.


A2TPON, ov, ,

backward steps inexorable, from

a star consisting of other


whom

,
,
1. 5. 7. ,
not to be confounded.
ov,


ov 9 not to be calumniated.

,
stars, a constellation

,
lad. 1 15. a distinguished
the dog-star.

,
,

an image in the form

of a star, Acts 7. 43. star of wisdom, Pal-
ornament— Sirius,

a neighbour to the stars,


ov ov, not to be plunder-
ed, inviolable, Helen. 456.

,,
safe retreat, an asylum, Med. 387.
inconclusive not attainable
by reason, Plut. 8. 293. not powerful in—

a
, >.
lofty,

,
towering, Prom. 720.
ov, prescribed for the stars, said
of their laws, Pallad. 62.
ov, 6, one who predicts future
events from the stars, an astrologer, an ob- ,
reasoning or in counsel, Polyb. 12. 3.
ov, not capable of coalescing,
reconcileable.

,
cilably.

ov, not to be conjectured, inca-
adv. irrecon-
ir-

'

, .
server of the laws of the stars, an astrono- pable of being learnt, Trach. 707.

,.
mer,

of the
4. 2. 10.

,,
ov, o,
stars,
, astrology, astronomy.
I practise astrology.
one who studies the laws
an astronomer.
his share— a fruitless member
the hive, ,
ov, one who does not contribute
a drone of
an entertain*
meat defrayed by one man, and not by con-
tribution, Luc. 3. 28.

— — — —— — —— — — —

,
,, , 2
,
207

, proportionate,
eoc, not having sympathy with.

.
6, , incommensurate, dis-
2. 8. Pint. 3.
752.
ag, disproportion, the want of
symmetry or moderation, Luc. 3. 499.
,
, —
ing with daffodil.

fainting, Lucill.
adjectively,

ov,
ATA

not having a vivid pulse,


fering a stagnation of the blood as a person
1 1 5.
Od.

—not
.,
. 1 3.

producing ex-
abound-
208

suf-

.
),
, ,
,

,
ov, inexpedient, 5. 2. 11. in- citement, Plut. 5. 502.

,

,^,
convenient, Troad. 491. hurtful, Hes.£.7SO.

, ),
f. aor. 2.

,
,
adv. without use. f. I grieve, am indignant — I chafe, fret,
to be inexpedient. Herod. 3. 152. II. . 292.

,
,
ov, 6, discordant, Acts 28. 25.

,dissonance, disagreement.
ov, irreconcileable.
unconnected, distant, K.5. 30.
ov,

- ,
ov,
(scil.
might, Od. y. 104.

—not using
not to be restrained, impetuous.

ov,

,
— intolerable, . 549.
.
irresistible in

without shape or figure


II.

, , ,
ov, 6, 57, unwise, imprudent, unen- figures of speech,

,, . -
,
, ,
,
lightened, Rom. 10. 30.Phoen. 1606.

,
,
,
adv. unwisely, foolishly.

,
,
ignorance, folly, O. 8. 17.
unwise, Agam. 1068.
unaccustomed, strange to.
, unseemly, indecent,

exposed, 1 Cor. 12. 23.


6,

7.
ij,

the parts of the body improper to be

f. r,aa, I act unseemly, do a base


c. s. -

, , ,
less,

, ,
ov, 6,
Rom. 1. 31.
covenant-breaking, faith-

faithless, Dem. 383.


bining, Long. 10. 6.
vj,

the most
6. not capable of com-
I break a
,,
act —am ignominiously treated, Hecub.407.

Rev. 16. 15.


202, ,
,
*], indecency ,turpitude,shame,

6, q, having no leisure, busy,

,
adv. with-

.
covenant. breach of faith. Orest. 93. occupied.
,
, ,
,
,
6, ij, unarranged, disorderly out leisure, I am engaged, bu-
— incompact, clumsy, K.3.3. sily occupied, ,
-
,
adv. without order, in confusion. I cause to be busy, employ, occupy,

, I have no leisure,

,
ov, relaxed, remiss, feeble Luc. 1. 845.
adv. without effort, feebly, remissly. am occupied, busily employed,
adverbially, most feebly, . Luc. 3. 212.

, .,,
, ,
4.2. 15. want of leisure, occupation, bu-

, unarranged, said of utensils


ov, siness, 9. 8.

, ,
so placed as to be inaccessible or unfit for
use, O. 8. 13.

, Att. inconsistent,
Supp. 32.
satiety.
marshy, from
— loathing, Plut. 10. 56.
mud,
from ,.

,, , ,
ov,
beyond compare, Agam. 1479. incorporeal, immaterial.
ov,

,mean, contemptible, II. . 648. ov, 6, abandoned, desperate, pro-


ij,

, , Arab. buDlLW, most mean, Damm, 2480, de-

, ,,,,- , , )
rives it from

Ajax, 844.

not
ov,
unwise, of no skill.
ov,inconvulsive, easy death,
to struggle.
unslaughtered, Ion. 228.
eog, comp.
liable to fall or stumble, firm,
sup.
solid
fligate, Ajax, 190.
1606.

),

wasteful, deadly, Agam.
a prodigal, Prov. 7. 11.
adv. prodigally,
13, living in ruinous extravagance,
those who are sick beyond hope
recovery, given up, Plut.
, v\,
Luke 1 5,

profligacy, prodigality.
9. 635. fr. , . of

. ,
sure, ATAKT02, (, not subject to

, ,^\.,
safe, certain. adverbially, ov,
safely

, ,
safety, security.
it is safe,

from a
discipline,insubordinate, disorderly, l Thess.
5. 14. adv. without order, in a

,
,
safe place,

Att.

,,. ,
1. 3. 5.

, jj,
4. 16.
adv. safe-
ly, with certainty, with safety or firmness,

, safety, security, certainty.


disorderly manner, opp. to
sistently with the laws, Dem. 38. 11.

&, ,
f. ,
incon-

I disobey orders, behave dis-


orderly, 2 Thess. 3. 7.

,
I render safe,fasten— secure want of discipline, insubordi-

,.
tj,

by a guard, Mat. 27. 64. fortify. — Dem.

,
nation, confusion, 38. 14.
,
q, a kind of fat clay like pitch, equal in weight equal in
ov, —

,
.

, bitumen— a bituminous lake. Heb. nVStt?,

^,
f.

,
,
a low ground, Theo. 16. 100.

- I cover with bitumen.


, for the throat or
combat, a match, II,
pearance, like, a for

priv.—
169.— equal in ap-

free from labour or trouble, a


irksome, a aug. Thuc. 1. 20.
.

, ,.
windpipe, II.

the throat,
,
f. ,
328..
I rattle,
e>,
I make
Theo.
the daffodil,
a rattling noise in
J

its
7. 94.
stem is called
A02,
adv.without weariness or trouble.
, 6, >;, {,
from sorrow or misery— of an age not to
suffer misery, young, tender, II.
short) free

. 577.
— — — — — — ——

, ,
209

^, , —
f.
ATE
ease and
I sport, frisk in ,
, ,, vj,
ATI
childless, . . . 13.
-
2lb

plenty cherish, gladden, Ajax, 560.


, , II. 400. said of a . ,,
, ,, ,
2,
f. you, I
,
am childless.
the being without a child,
.
,
babe notyet capable of care or sorrow,\vhere
a contrast is intended between him and
his amiable parents now overwhelmed with

,
distress.
, weak-spirited, Agath. 23.
conjunction, (from by exclud-
,
.,
f. I render childless, fr.
comp.

abortive, Long. 14. 3.


795.—
u, —
s.

brought to an end, imperfect, incomplete,


not


ineffectual, Philoct.
sure, certain, Od. q. 546.
exempt from tribute, Polyb. 22,
-, ?, ,

, ., , ,
ing ,) but, and, x. 506. sed, at, II. 26. 17.
and not, . 214. see 313. In prose writers Ion. ^', exemption from

,
plied by

, , ,, ,
,
seldom used, and

turbance,
is

or
,
.
out alarm or confusion,
,
,.
^,.
place is sup-
its
2. 1.2. 0.17. 15.
undisturbed, not causing dis-
2. 1.

, composure, Plut. 3. 500.


, 2. . 16.
,
adv. with-

.
-,
,

,
15. —uninitiated, Bacch. 40.
and ,
tribute, privilege, A. 3. 3. 11.
unfinished unripe— unavailing
impracticable, uncultivated, Dem. 1461.

not brought to
an end, not capable of being executed, im-
not Completed, .

,
unalarmed, practicable, II. x. 527.
, , — not to
,
unalarmed, in- 1 75. i)e wrought upon, inflexible,
trepid,
unmoved
II. y. 63. v. 299.
at the sight
\ §, neut.
(Ed. T. 341.
I beguile by false hopes, Od. 90. .

, '', ',. , , ., I am stripped, balk-


plur. adverbially, deprive
Ajax, 197, insolence moves on, spreads with ed of, II. .
835.
an unawed, unblushing front, , ,,
intent, steady, keen mind, Hes.
or 6, a , 6. 661. —
inflexible, Vespse, 730. wide- —
straight path, a path that does not tarn to spreading ivy, Antig. 826.
the right or left, and therefore liable to be in undaunted freedom of speech eager, in- —

, >,

23,) ,
some places steep and nigged, Herod. 7.175.

',
the straight path to the grave, (Theo.23.
whence there is

,,
no return, , ^.
tent, Nem.
tensely, very.
f.
7*

7,
129.

I
adverbially, in-

look with stretched eyes,

202, , , •,
gazed at,

,
unyoked, chaste. gaze upon, Acts 3. 2.

), , ,
or

,
guilt,
,
efflorescing with passion
self-willed, and therefore inattentive
to the claims or feelings of others, insolent,
inclement, unjust, profligate, II. v. 634.
694. xtyi, §7.
,
.
Simonid. 90.
adv. or prepos. with-
out, asunder, apart from, II. x. 498.
ov, and
to be boiled or digested, hard as a rock,

, difficult

, ,
f. f. I Theo. 10. 7. said of anger that will not be

,
bloom, effloresce with passion as with blos-
soms, behave wantonly,Od. r. 88. act con- —
..
sooi/^i/,stubborn,implacable
sound, Prom. 1098.
,
harsh grating
,
Polyb. 4.21.4.

, , ,
,
trary to justice, truth and honour,

104. —
, sj,

injustice, rapine, violence,


, unburied, Hec.
57.
infatuation, rashness,

30.
Od.
II.

. 67.
.
'
Ion. for
boundless, having no ex-
tremes as a circle, round, Hec.

, — ^, , —
another, Herod.4.1 1.
926.,.
delightless

,
6, v\,

, , thexxf
being unburied. .

,
delightless/ccrs£, joyless, sullen bitter, II.
'
Are, ,
for because,
i.e. re, as, in- 285. — gloomy,disagreeable —painful, r. 3 54.
^.
, . , .
asmuch

^, , ,—,
neut.
where, Theo.
. 1. 3. 3.
as,

,
of 6 and ,

6,
hard-hearted, Here. F. 833. «,
1.

,
plur.
15. ceu, utpote,

unmoistened with
xrs,
quippe,

tears,
less

1 1 1 8.
pleasing, Thuc.


,
not obtained by
unwrought.
,
22. 1.

«epriv.

A. R. 1. 15. 1.
or
,
unarmed, Androm.

artless, guileless, inartificial,


Philip.62.

,
art, x,
not to be worn or wearied, adv. without art or guile

,
.
,, , —-, -
invincible, II. y. 60.— imperishable, Olym.
1. 60. importunate, rierce, Theo. 23. 6. x,

. ,, . , without a wall, ov, un-


,7\\,
plainly, assuredly, by all means, Luc. 1.57.
,,
neglected, Again. 900.
unskilfulness, inertness.

5. 4. 9. .
ov, unadorned,

, ,
walled, unfortified, Ay. 2. 24.

,,
for conjecture
63. —uncertain

their use,
not affording a sure ground

,

not ascertained, Thuc. 4.

wavering, Aves, 170.

.
adv. without certainty,
things uncertain as to
1. 4. 4. , *».
,

,
adv. negligently, heedlessly,

8. 1.5.
to be neglected or unheeded,
,
,
neglect, Apoll. 3. 829.
of Attica, Apoll. 1. 93.
,
without honour,Mat.l3.57.
6, , com. , , sup.
— dishonoured,
.
— — — — —— ———— ——
211

,.
disgraced, degraded

,
—ignoble,
,
opp. to ev- ,
? scil. *,
ATP
in indivisible time,
212
i. e.

, ,, .
5. 5. 3. a less in an instant, 1 tor. 15. 52.
honourable seat, , — adv.with- ov f unsecured by a wall, unfortified,

,- , ,
,
out honour, ignominiously. Ion, 1133.

,part. pass,
ed,

lue
/,
Mark
f.

ov,
— unrewarded,
12. 4.
I dishonour, disgrace, perf.
ignominiously treat-

dishonoured— mean, of no va-


Up. 9. 10. —
, ,, ,.
pital
,
11. 42.
, timidity,
without usury, said of a ca-
adj.
not producing interest, Dem. 1 250.
, 3j, not bold, cowardly, Nem.

,
adv. timidly.
, 12. 3. 22.
>

an action at law, the penalty of which


was not left to the discretion of the judge,
,
,
op, not to be dared, not to be at-
tempted, Isthm. 8/ 23.
— relaxed,

,
,,
but was unalterably fixed by the laws. ov, unextended languid.
, .
q, disgrace, degradation, infamy

, f. n<ru, I am relaxed, 1 become infirm,

., ,,
— contempt,
._,
violate, Hipp. 611.

despise, 1. 4.
<?, ^,
1. 2. 51.

I dishonour, treat with con-


tempt, (Ed. T. 348. dishonour an oath,

1 7.


despise, undervalue.
is necessary to dishonour, must

, one who dis- ,


paralytic or weary, uZ. 752.

,
Luc. 1.

try, foreign
,75.
ov,
<ij,
Plut. 7. 358.
relaxation, languor, debility,

that which has no place in a coun-


that which has no place in na-
ture or the course of events, unaccustomed,
strange, unexpected that which has no

,
,,
,
honours another, avenger, Septem, 635.
f. I deprive a person of his rank
as a citizen, degrade, Dem. 743. 21.
place in reason and truth, irrational, absurd,

,
inconvenient that which has no place in
sound morals, wicked, impious, 2 Thess. 3.

, ,
degradation, ignominious
sag, 2. adv. absurdly, without reason

,,
, ,
*;,

,death, Choeph.. 433.


,
, one who neglects his flock.
said of a bull that wanders from his
own herd to another, Thee. 25. 132.
,
or justice.
ij,

verseness, absurdity
ov,
strangeness,Plut.8.360. per-

insolence, Ran. 1419.
without pomp, ,

,
Theo. destitute of

,,,
f. I neglect, 9. 5. Plut. 8. 61. ov,

, .
despise, see Schol.

Eum. 820.
,
on Luc. 2. 336. dignity.
mourning in dishonour, Aux.oc,
— distaff.
, 6,

,,
a reed, arrow, Philoct. 286.

, , I disgrace, make no account of, a epecies of thorn, a

,
Rhian. Theo.
— ,', , , a path which has
1. briar, 4. 52.

, . ,
II. v.

.
414. Eum.
ov,

, unavenged, Eum. 252.


unhonoured, unavenged,
389. , . no turning, a straight road, Herod. 7. 175.
Od. v. 195.— a beaten path, 3. 11. 8. .
,,
,, .
pensed, Thuc.
, , , unpunished — unrecom- — track of
3. 57. ,
,
,
history, subject,
that which has
'*", the pa-
584.
no darkness,

. ,.
», unshaken, (from a priv. and the Persian

,
rear, educate with care and ten- rent also of dark,) clear, bright, true real
derness, Od. <r. 322. adorn, grace, Theo. 15. blood, i.e. the blood of a real man and not
110. see

,, a man in appearance, or of a god, compare


, ,-,,
, . sincere, im- —
,
ov, unsufferable, U. 367. II. e. 208. with 117. certain
I refuse to endure, (Ed. T. 523. , partial, Olym. 3. 21. adverbially,

a. 52. —
brother of Prometheus, Od.
a mountain of Mauritania. ,,
truly, certainly, manifestly or
adv. with truth, in reality, in a

, ,, -
las, Atlantean.

,
vj, ov
— a, ov, of At-
the x\tlan-
tic isles, the Hesperides. These lay on the
Ion. ,, , ,,
clear light, II. . 10. Herod. 1. 57.
~, y, brightness,
truth, sincerity, Herod. 4. 152.
borders of Libya, and to them the poets re- ATPEMH2,£c,*£os

ov, unmoved,


, ,, ,.
ferred their Elysian fields. still soft silent,
,, the fifteen daughters of without agitation, quietly, steadily,

, ,
,
Atlas, of which five were called Hyades,
the rest Pleiades.
— , — ,firmly, II. s. 318. . 200.
f.

,
f. I am quiet,

, remain still am in a state of tranquillity


>

,
6, va-

pour, exhalation, steam, smoke, Acts 2. 19. and peace, Herod. 7. 8 ; S. 68.— keep still,
f. ", emit vapour, A. 4. 5. 10. confirm, Theogn. 303.

:, ,,
.
full of vapour, steaming.
., ,
, freedom from fear, compo-

,4. 47. «,
ov, uncut, undipped

,,or
undug,

ov, uncut, unshorn, Trach. 203. ev



trepid, II. «*. 163. ,
sure, firmness, Nem. 11. 14.
,
6, , without trembling, firm, in-

am without
— — — \ — — — —
213 ATT
,
,
214

,
,,
»,

,
fear or trembling, am calm or firm.
unagitated, Theogn. 972.
ov,
ov,

,
without terror, intrepid.
immutable,
inflexible,

. ,
,^™,
ar^o- adv. with Attic elegance or purity,
after the manner of the Attics.

E. 1.6. 9.
I favour, imitate the Athenians,

, , )
intrepid, neut.plur. adverbially
ov, adv. in the Attic dialect.
,%
,,,
securely, in safety, Ion. 1198.

,, ,, ,
, —- Attic purity or manners.

, ,
adv. without fear, with intrepidity. 1 jump, spring as

.
(for or
6, the son of Pelops a snake, Dem. 786. 5.
ov, 6, or the son of ov, unmade, Phocyl. 51. ,

, ,^
Atreus, Agamemnon or Menelans. ov, unburied, tombless

,, , — .
ov, tender-footed horses* a, rot- death, not blessed with a grave, Cri nag. 3 5.
or

untrodden, indistinctly marked,


8. 3*

4. 2. 6.
ov — (),
.
, , pendent, Thuc. 1.18. a-,
devoid of pride, without pomp.
ov,
^.
ov, not tyrannized over, inde-

,
undiminished, entire, 8. 7. 3.
trodden, imperviable, Theo. 18. 64. un-
trained in, uninured, tender, Od.
.
not to be —
.

, ,
, freedom from pride, an una
suming deportment, Plut. 6. 103.
,,
luckless, unfortunate -
,
151.

,
untrodden, said of conumthrash-
ed, O. 18. 5.
,
, ,.
Long. 33.
adverbially, most unfortunately,

,, am —
,
ov, o, 37, without hair, Call. 3. 77. a, f. -/\, I fail to obtain, miscarry

unfortunate, JNubes, 427. .


1. 3. 12.

, without
terror, Antip.Sid.40. , £&, ',
,
, ',
unalterable, eternal sleep, Theo.
ov, miscarriage, disappointment, misfortune,
3. 49. a priv. —
that which turns aside, per- calamity, slaughter, 3. 9. 8. Dem. 17 1.1 1.
verse, Nem. 7. 151. a augm.
,
^~. , adv. (seemingly from ,
to breathe, and

,
inflexibility, sternness. means the act which is consequent on
ov, 6, , unfed, lean. fr. , ,,. breathing, i. e. to throw back the breath)

3. 3. 4. am unfed.
. back, retro, ll.ee. 759. up, 261. .
again,

, ov, adj. free


, ,
honey beyond reach, Antiphil.
from dregs. ,
not to be gathered, said of

barren sand, II. a. 31 6.


ov, fruitless,
fruitless night, Damag. 11. i.e. death, as dif-
30.

,
rursus —
also, moreover, porro, etiam
one's turn, 3. 3. 5. see E. 6. 4. 35.
contrary, Ax. 2. 1. 11.— further, next, U.
. 43.
a, ov, dry, hollow sound,

,
in
on the —
.

137,

,
II.

fering from night in which man when weary — needy.


^, ,
enjoys the of repose,
fruit ,^. parched, Theo.
f. avdvco, aor. 1.
8. 48.
I dry by ex-

,
avetivo),
not worn down, unsubdued —
posing to the sun wither, cause to fade,
by evils, Septem, 874. S. Elect. 821. aor. 1. avavuriv,

,
ov, indefatigable, vast, immense, He- I am dried, seasoned as Umber is, 0. 16. 13.

rod. 9. 52. ,
utqvtojvyi, ,
Mosch. 4. 69.
, invincible, scil. Minerva.
A~^yro.c,oj>,invulnerable, unpierced, disabled,

. —
,
,
,
— pine away, burst, said of envy, Anthol.
I. 485.

a, ov, dry eyes, squalid, Theo. 14,. 4.

,said of a ship,Polyb. 1.46. 10.


ed, Phcen. 603.
father, sir,

to elders, Od. w. 57. 31.


cc,
unwound-

a term of respect addressed


,
v\, ov, dry, combustible, Rhian. 5.

ov, 6, prince of the Eleans, whose


stable was cleansed by Hercules.
, , light, beam, lustres-dawn,
,
Arret, or arret, Att. for ccrivct, or rivet, Dor.

,, —
Acts 20. 11. blaze offire a mirror, so called

ever
some, any, whatever things, of what-
sort,
things, 11. 2. 2. 6.
, 3. 3. 6,
arret,
— those,
- ret
what those works' are.
,
,,
some mournful
arret
-
from
926.
its bright

f.

4.4. intransitively
and polished surface, Hecub.
the eyes, Androm. 1181.
I shine, beam upon, 2 Cor.
— illumine, irradiate, tran-
ccrret ctv
Dem. 17. 15, whatever those events may
be which await you. arra, any other
ret

,, sitively—

,,
I eye, see in a clear light, \.-.458.
ro, brightness, splendour.
a voice, word, discourse, II. .

,
things, Ikq. 8. 7. arra, innumerable 249. a thing expressed in words, E. Supp.

,,
things, Long. 32. 6.
the bald locust, Lev. 11. 22.
ov, 6,
Arrdrai, alas ! Philoct. 743.
/,— , ,
600. sound of a trumpet, Rhesus, 144.
having an articulate voice,

,
using the language of men, Od. . 334. vo-

UKrr..
ov, 6, a species of locusts, Herod.
4. 172. see Pliny, 29. 5.
-, ov, Athenian, Attic

{, elegant.
Attic, i, e. honest faith, see
— ,
cal, in .opposition to fishes that are mute
civilized, eloquent, . 125.
f. wa, I speak audibly or distinctly,

tell — utter, accost, mean, Hipp. 352.


1282,— coimtiandj Dem,
call,
581* 2.

imp. «o-
'
2
— — — — ——— — — ——I

215
.,.,
}>ws, ,
he spoke, shouted,
cuvhwofAsy,
&
Ion.

,,
,
he spoke,

,, ,,
,,
we will speak
e.
II.

786.
of,
.
,
54. aor. 1.
for

eelebrate,01ym.
- ',, ,
for
I

\ Theo. 25. 87.


a email inclosure, a

, a place of abode for the night,


a tent, pavilion— a fold— nest.
216
stall, fold,

,1 .

self, 2.

,
1 2. f.

166.
m.

«|>, I speak, aor. 1. m. yvha^u,-


f.
I will utter for my- f.

,

bring to or put up in
the fold tarry, abide, imp.
spent the nights, lodged, Luke 21. 37. aor.
he -,
2,
, ,
5. 51.
she expressed herself, spoke, Herod.

(, ) 02, ,
1. pass, he took up his abode, or
lodged, Mat. 21. 17. yvTuauw*», they spent

,
self-willed, e. the day, tarried, encamped, A. 4. 3. 1.
sturdy, keen, Prom. 64. —insolent- , a thing bored or excavated,

,
to

,
, ,
stubborn, unruly, 2 Pet. 2. 20.

haughtily.
or
arrogance, stubbornness.
cruel, opp.

adv. insolently,

q, self-sufficiency, ,
, ,
fr. the Heb. 11T\, a pipe, flute, lute, II. .


495. what is conveyed through a pipe,

,,,
stream, Od. 18. —
a clasp, . 227. the
.
socket of a spear, II. . 297.
f. I play on a pipe or flute, I pipe

,
-,
,
,
,.
brother,
,

,,
,
ov, self-pleasing, unfeeling.

6,
, insolence,
foul-mouthed, Ranae, 861.
one of the 6ame blood, a

, of one's
Prom. 963.

ownaccord,
/, ,
, ,,

Iphig.
with music.

.
imp.
sound with piping,

Ranas, 1337.
6. 5.
,
,
I am piped

. 367, every house rings,


piping, sound of the pipe,
resounds

, .;,
6,

- ,,
unsolicited, 2 Cor. 8. 3. self-elected, A. i), playing on the pipe.

5. 7. 17. adv. voluntarily, fr. ?•/, — , a flute-player,

-, — a piper, Hes. x. 283. Acharn. 862.

,, .,
Ethic, . 7.

46.

self,
self-same in all things, Arist.
severe, Plut. 6. 38.
e-ac, adv. in every instance, rigidly, Plut. 3.

, one who is armed


against him-
self-murderer, one who
,
\,
, a female flute-player.
n, ov, belonging to the pipe, of the
pipe or flute, A. R. 1. 11. 15.

,, ,
, a pipe- or flute-maker,
ov, immaterial, incorporeal, x, v'h-.i.
, a narrow passage, channel

.
,
perpetrates a crime with his own hands a narrow sea, streight, Prom. 730. a de-

, —
,, ,
pression between two hills, a valley.
author, Polyb. 23. 14. usurper, adjectively,

-,
,self-inflicted, Heracl. 839. high-coned helmet, II. ?. 182.

,
f. I exercise power over, do- oblong, conical.
mineer, 1 Tim. 2. 12. I cause to grow, give increase, aug-

,
,, ., —
, ov, on the same day ment, advance, Nem. 7. 47.— enlarge, feed,
adv. the very day, Dera. 543. 11. prosper, Olym. 5. 8. I am aug-

mented, I increase, Nem. 8. 68. imp. -


,
adv. for here, in the same place,
II. x. 492. hie, ibidem there, in the same ,. ,
, grew, became
f. I
great, .
,
4. 2. 2.
cause to grow, enlarge, feed,

,
, —
grave, y. 244. illic.
adv. again, a second time back
hereafter, II. x. 425.
,
in return.

,
2. 7. 9.
E. 7. 1. 12. aor.
—promote,
l.pass.
subj.
ye might increase, 2 Pet. 2. 2.
ivx

,
aggrandize, honour,

,, ,
born in the same place, na- cause to grow, give increase, aug-
I
tive, indigenous, Herod. 4. 48. 180.
born of the same blood.
ment, prosper,

,
1 Cor. 3. 6.

,
receive increase, I grow, flourish ; but
I
-
ing,
ov, dry-shouting, i.e. loudly shout-

,,,—, , , ,, II. v. 40.


and are sometimes used intran-
sitively in the sense of and -
,
'.,
, a furrow: hence, by prefixing , sulcus.
,
5j, a space round a house inclosed
, 01* '-

,
as in Ephes. 2. 21.
Mat.
give increase, augment, II.
I
prosper, Olym. 8. 116.
6. 28.
214.
cherish, . 139. —
.
,
,
by a wall, a court-yard a mansion, hall-
mansion of the dead, grave, Alcest. 261.
mansion of the gods, a temple a sheep-
fold, II. . 433.

, — ,tion,
I receive increase, imp.
grew, advanced, II. S. 66.

.,
, growth, increase, augmenta-
3. 6. ,
,God—
& $,
, of a hall or court
a curtain, tabernacle.
,
, ,
,
Col. 2. 19, scW.kx
to the increase of
increaseth according
receives a divine,

,
ov, of a hall or court, abundant increase.

, — ,,
$(>, causing an increase, K. 7. 3.
\, Od.ff. 238, at the porch or hall-door.
,,a porch, gate, Theo. 15. 43.
,,a bailiff, Apoli. 4. 1487. aridity,
dry, U.
yi,

fr.
ov,

. 327.
-clamour, fr.
,:
/\, drought,

Sim. 20.
—— — — —— — — —
217
-,
,, ,
ou,

sleepless rocks, ever sounding,


ATT
sleepless, wakeful, Od. .
Iph.T. 423.
84.

, . ,
ately.
ample,
,
ATT
4. 7. 2.
very readily —for
218
ex-

Ion. jjc,

,
breath, E. Supp. 1029. hence aura wind
in the vitals, i. e. the throbbings of pain,
,
air, breeze, gale,

, ,,, ,
again
%>
adv. the Ionic form of
— hereafter,
exhalation —
V,
II. a. 140.

6,
back
— in my turn.
breath — odour,
,Hipp. 165.

,
God, divine inspiration.
the breath of a

adv. the morning of the coming day,

, \? ,
ATT02,
,
blast, Od. . 399.
the same, opp. to
as is is to alius in Latin, 6
-

,,,,, , ,, ,
to-morrow, the time of to- Gal. 4. 17, he who doeth
morrow, to-morrow, the same shall live by the same. When
sc. the coming day, Alcest. 787. the same is a substitute for a person or thing
ot, Ausonians, the an- going before, it is rendered in English by
cient inhabitants of Italy i?, he, she, or it. therefore must be often
Ausonian jj, sc. Auso- rendered by these personal pronouns, as in

-,
nia or Ausonian land.
a, ou, dressed, shabby, a, - the above example, " he who doeth them
shall live by them." But the general use

,
ill

-,—
, ,
harsh
9 Od. .
cruel,
327.
a, ov,
Luke
(from

and -, ,
)
19. 21.
dry
hence
—rough
,
austere.
rough-
the context, then
,
of this pronoun is to mark opposition to
some other person or thing mentioned in
means self.
John 4. 2, Jesus him-

,
,
,
,
ness, harshness, austerity, A. 5. 4. 16.

cretion, attainable,

own
,
6, one who brings his own
message instead of sending information by
another, Philoct. 575. harbinger.
ou, depending on one's

ou,
brother or sister.
Od.

,,
145. .
born of the same womb, an

ago) but, on the


. own dis-
self did not baptize, in opposition to his dis-
ciples who did.

57,

9. 3.
himself a
fifth, i. e. with other four, Thuc. 1. 46.

, , , ,
who became
I myself, I too, as well as Peter,
II.
,
himself a disciple,

a. 4, themselves,
bodies or real selves, in opp. to
Mat. 27.

i. e.

upon them-
Rom.
their

,
conj. (from their empty shades.

contrary and. uvtxq and when, II. selves, i. e. the Greeks themselves, in opp.

--,. , , {, to the mules and dogs, II. a. 50.

,
y. 1 ; 421.
upon the lyre itself, upon the

,,
aqx-)) sufficient or

- ,
complete in myself, adequate, competent, very lyre, Anacr. 9.
.
, .
,
content, 2. 6. 2. comp.
-,,
4. 3. 3. p. 227.— satisfied with my own,
sup.
most satis-
Polyb. 1.51, for
they were near themselves,
near one another,
when
when they were

,
adverbially,
fied, with the utmost contentment, Ax. 1.
, 1. 57. 8, it happened that

these themselves perished these by them- —


,
2. 14. adv. sufficiently
to be content or independent, A. R. 1.6. 2. selves —
these alone perished, has the
,
,
,
vj, sufficiency, contentment. article sometimes prefixed
adv. (see ,
with which it has the or and then means, he who is the

,,
same sense) again, in return— on the con- same, the very same, the self-same, Hec.
trary, II. a. 404. i. e. the son being gene-

, ,,
299. Heb. 1. 12; 13. 8. is also
-
, ..
rally inferior to the father, see Hor. lib. 3. written the very same thing,
the very same seed, (Ed. T.

, ,-
od. 6. for here, II. a. 202. rov
declaring of himself, of 1125. moreover has I prefixed, and
one's own accord, voluntary, Here. F. 706. is contracted into the reciprocal
— unprovoked war, Polyb.
^, ,,
4. 1 6. pronoun own

,
self, she

Phoen. 776.

,,
as

,,,
battle,
f.
ou, having the self-same name,

one who himself rows as well


fights, Thuc. 1. 10. 6. 91.

, clamour a shout, the roar of
II. . 98.—battle,
I shout, roar, bellow call
II. a. 492. fr.


.
-
from her own

.
self,

,
CEd. T. 1237.
Mat.
twelve disciples, suos ipsius discipulos, in
opp. to the disciples of John understood.
Joseph.
J. 18. 1. 5, performing sacrifices on their
own selves, or according to Rom. 12. 1. of-
10. 1, his own

,
aloud, invoke, Hipp. 1 68. fering themselves a living sacrifice, and no
veau
-
,
,
,,
witness,
Phcen. 1277, you bellow fresh
alarm to your friends.

,,
adv. in the same day, 11. «.81.
,
, , himself a hearer, an eye-
axw&), Thuc. 1. 133.
adv. in the same instant, immedi-
'
longer the ritual sacrifices of the law.
Contra Apion.
2. 29, the law was able alone by its own self,
i. e. without any external allurement.

,
, the very man, i. e. the
archetype or general form of man in the
— — — — — —— —
510

, , , ATT
divine mind, which is the real man, in con-

. , ,. ,
tradistinction to the sensible man, which is
ATT
adv. like an absolute monarch, with the
authority of a sovereign.
220

,
but the shadow of him, Arist. Ethic, a. 6. J slay myself, part,
,
, , self-willed, acting on his they two slaying themselves, killing one

^,
,
,,
,. , , ,
own authority, Septem, 1055.
adv. on the first shout, at the onset.
Thuc.

.
merce, Antig. 876.
8. 62.
,

, —
6, q,
born of himself.
incestuous com-
native modesty.
one who acts at his
another, Antig 56.

Med. 1254.
ov, self-slaying, violent hands,
or adv.
with mutual slaughter,violently,iE.Supp.69.

Prom. 300.
ov, self-formed, native caves.

ov, , one who carries his own

,
own
f. ,
,
discretion, an arbiter
I act at my own discretion, proceed
without the form or authority of law, E.
7. 3. 6.
oil,

^/,
one who
1261. 17.
is his own

play the lyre myself,


I
said of
attendant,

one who while affecting


Dem.

,
-;,,,
, . 02,
uutograph.

,
)
tog,
self-determined, Antig. 687.
written with one's own hand,

.,
self-learnt, invented by him-
elegance, yet does a thing with extreme
awkwardness, Luc. 2. 321.
ov, or , ov, ,
self-moving, moved by an internal impulse,
{,

, ,
Ajax, 709. II. e. 479. spontaneous, and not asked vo-

.
self,

, , self-slain, mutually luntary, and not forced —


not premeditated,
slaughtered, Septem, 732. sudden, Pyth. 4. 107. adv.
,,
,
e&Tohxxersx,
ten years, Thuc. 5. 20.

,, ,,
,
the entire space of

, , self-taught, Od. 847.


», self-evident, Septem, 848.
,
one who has the power of de-
.
spontaneously, from blind impulse, strange-
ly, Theo. 21. 37.
taneously, by accident
a spontaneous motion chance, Plut. 9.
251.

spon-
y, ,

,
^, .
,
Thuc.
,
ciding without appealing to another— in-

-,
,
dependent in the administration of justice,
5. 18. ItKq.
adv. in the same way, instantly,
f. fo-, I move spontaneously,

act on my own authority,


,
,
4. 5. 10.
very mother, own mother.
, , spontaneously moving
.
,
Od.

,, , . ,
,, ,
3. 449.

,,
the instrument
petrator, murderer, (Ed. T. 107.

,, adv. in the same year.


ov, one who himself
is

the very per-

.
a deserter, IT. 3. 3. 22.—
I come of my own accord
10.

power,
,
free,
,
,,

desertion.
not subject to a foreign
independent, .
1. 1. 4.—
f.

desert, A. 1. 7.

*-

, , adv, from the same place, I use my own laws,


,
,
thence, II. r. 77.— from that very circum-

am free, or independent— ,
.

, , .
stance, Acharn. 116. there, Theo. 5. 60. freedom, independence, 5. 1. 33.
— in the same place, there, here, 5. adv. in that very night,

.
60. Herod. 4. 29.
one who makes a coarse solid
ov, wrought of mere wood, or of
wood, Philoct. 35.

,
ov,
,
-, .
bread for himself— made on the spur of the self-made, i. e. not made by
moment, coarse, vulgar, A. R. 3. 14. 11. human of the of the bees,

',
art, said cells

•, ,
•, ,. ,
, ,
,
, an own brother
an own sister, a sister german.
,
, , self-condemned,
Antiphil. 29.
,, the very son, Trach. 839.
self-made, <Ed. C. 730.
ov,

,
,
Tit. 3.

,
,
1

,
1.

commissioned, of his
9. 5. A. 3. 4. 3.
,
— 6, , travelling alone.

own
, ,
accord, Herod.
, self-
,, , possessing a city of their
own, having a free state, Thuc. 5. 79.
ov, self-wrought, or working
for one's self, industrious bees, Antiph. 29.
and branch, Antig. 725.

, , ,,,, , .
;,
accord, Trach. 396.

Rana3, 840.

who
, 6,

, wearing

q, self-invited,

has power over himself, not subject


his own

.
of his

hair, iiairy,

, 6,
own

one
, , an eye-witness, Luke
flowing of itself, spontaneously
ov,
dropping, Pyth. 12. 30.
himself, herself, itself, a
contraction of the reciprocal e and
adv. to the same place, A. 4.
1. 2.

7. 1.

& ,;,
one who has
potentiary, E.
,
to a master, independent,

narch, a despot.
all
7.
power
1. 1.

2. 1. 21.
in himself, a pleni-
— an absolute mo- ,
another,
%-^, .
ov, spontaneously grown.
ov, self-roused,
Eum.
Ion.
169.
unprcpelled by

, h, a stand-
— — —— — —
&21 ATT
ing fight, a single-handed combat, a pitched , , using his
A
own hand,
Ajax, 57. an
222

-,
,
,
battle, II. v. 325. <?.
ov, having himself sailed here, in
his own ship, Philoct. 505.
assassin

.,
adverbially, with his or
my own hands, S. Elect. 1025. Acts 27. 19.

,
,
, the actual perpetration of

,
ov, groaning under self-brought murder, in contradistinction to the planning

sorrows, Septeni, 920.
,
. of it, E. 6. 4. 34. killing with one's own

, ,
self-slain, slain by his own hands, Herod. 3. 13.

, ,
hands, Ajax, 840.
a, ov, made on
the spur of the

, , born on the very land in


which a person lives, a native, Ion. 29. in-

,
occasion, ready, spontaneous, close combat digenous, Agam. 545.
— a close wound, i. e. a wound inflicted at ov, for wrought of
. . 826.
hand, fatal, l\.
or
192.
adv. at hand,
,( ,
solid brass, II.

adv. Equit. 74, in effect, really.

, , ,—
closely, in close quarters, II. y. 273. or this, the same, ad-
I act or speak from a verbialized) thus, so, in the same manner,
),
f.

sudden impulse act without authority (Ed. T. 950. §g for in



from another undertake a thing rashly, the same manner, 2. 1. 9. . thus, i. e. —
without any preparation, risk, At. 3. 5. 21. as now, in vain, II. a. 1 33. thus, as now,—
, 6, one who undertakes a —

,,
i. e. without cause, 528. thus, i. e. alto-
thing without due qualification, a novice, gether, completely, 138. . —
thus, i. e. with-
an unexperienced speaker or agent, opp. out price or reward, /. 595. thus, i. e. un- —
to .
13. 5. armed, . 198. so that the meaning always
, , self-perfect, i. e. contain-
,
depends on the context.
ATXHN,
ing in one's self the principles of perfection 6, the neck, or the back of
'

— prompting to the fulfilment of its own the neck— shoulder, Anacr. 4. a neck of —
purposes, Plut. 6. 510.— using their own —
land, an isthmus
,
a high place,

.,
,, ,
\,
mere
,
tributes, and not paying them to others, free,

, ,
independent, Thuc. 5. 18.
completely, with absolute authority.

tragic ape.
,
Dem. 307. 25, a
adv.
he bears his head over
his neck, he bears it aloft, i. e. is proud or
confident.
a, ov, of the neck,
",
imp.
Od. y. 450.
I cut the

,
f.

same
adv. scil.
place, there, here —
in that or in the
in the same time, scil. f. ,
throat, strangle, Ajax, 289.
I lift the neck— I glory, boast,

, ,
one who
immediately.
ov, 6, , self-made, native song
cultivates his own land —a

la-
Thuc. 2. 39. pride in, Iphig. A. 412.

,,, vj, glory, boast,


,
Nem.
an act of pride or boast-
7. 38.

,
bourer, ?,
with self-working
hand, with his own hand, Orest. 918. ocv-

, I labour with my own hands, sup-


-

ing
",
,,
or ,— ,
a proud mark, Phcen. 1144.

kindle, shine
f. I dry, parch with heat
cause to shine, Od. e. 490.
ply myself by labour, Plut. 2. 825.
,— , one's own labour, Plut. 2.
,to
,
,'; a want of rain, drought, opp.

squalidness, Plut. 5. 147.

',—
130. 544.

,
a work made by one's own
hands, Eum. 337.
ov, together with its bark,Theo.

,
25. 208. rude, unpolished, Philip. 7.
,
, one who sheds
,
, , , ,
,
.
^^,
f.
f. I am squalid,
a, ov, squalid, sordid, filthy
705. Theo. 25. 225.
parched, squalid, Orest. 223.
or f. I shout re-
Od. a. 249.


dry,

, his own blood, or that of a near relative,


Med. 1269. adv. with her own
hands, or by self-murder, M. Supp. 65.


,, sprung up of itself native,
own natural course, It. 7. 11.
.
-,
,, —, -.,
sound, II. v. 409.— call upon, invoke, g. 11,
Mo\. for

Antig. 253.
,
the morning, aurora.
perform holy rites for the dead,

(, ,)
, , ,
I purify,

', adv. spontaneously, —


render holy consecrate, Num. 6.3. — offer

,
, vowel —
ov, springing up of itself, said of
a wound that is not inflicted, but breaks
out of itself, Pyth. 3. 83.
ov, expressed of itself, said of a
of a tree which
self-uttering, said
expiatory sacrifice, Alcest. 1156.

take
tract
f.

— take one
guish, separate

away— take a part from the whole,
aor. 2.

thing from another, distin-


— take away from a place,
I
sub-

had power to deliver oracles, Luc. 2. 705.


ov, caught in the act of thieving
detected in the very act, John 8. 4.
self-convicted, Antig. 52.
the fact, clearly, . , in
remove, reject, expel
[authority, suppress, prohibit,
— take away by law or
take away war, discontinue, cause to cease
— take away envy, eradicate, At. 2. 6. 23.
abandon, Rom. 11, 27. take away a limb, —
At. 3. 6. 6.—
— — — —
223 A 224
amputate, pare
spoil,
—take away beauty,
nails
deface, destroy — take away what
longs to another, spoil, deprive of, divest
, ,-, , be-
Hes. .
ble,

,,
3.
Long. 34.
,
— surprising, Ion. 783. innumera-
inability to speak through fear
,.
, ,
aor. 2.
II. a. 161.

,, ,,
,,
take away fromsight, conceal.


I take away for myself,
rob, deprive of take away
one's attempt, frustrate, Polyb. 10. 12.4.
for

II. a. 230.
or astonishment, Thesm. 911.

,
opp. to
opp. to
f. I dry up, exhaust.
ov, comp.

or
,
light, airy

— «<pi«u^c,adv.indistinctly,imperfectry.
obscure, ignoble,

vapid, infirm,
small, Theo. 21.

,
275, for 49.

,
thyself.
do thou not take away the girl

,, ,,
taken away, Herod. 1.14.
for

necessary to take away.


,Num.
it is
taking away, depriving
for
having
.
,
Lev. 15. 19.
,
,
without light, dark, Phcen. 556.
—softly breathing odour, Prom. 115. u,

, separated, unclean,
, that part of

,
sj,

,
an oblation,

, .
word.

.
, . ,, <, ,
^,,
,
from,
, ,
36. 4. aphaeresis, a figure
in grammar, by which a vowel or syl-
lable is taken away in the beginning of a

aor. 2. I jump, spring


the body on which a person sits, podex,

anus a sink, a privy, Mat. 15. 17.
,
unsparing, liberal, abundant,
Call. 6. 126.— frequent, Thuc. 4. 26. ec,
— or
— without
adv. unspar-
-

,,
462. ingly mercy, severely,

258. ,
, without a cone or crest, II. . , most
f.
severely, A. 1. 9. 8.

I spare not, lavish, Luc. 3.

,,
miscarry,

-, . ,
aor. 2.

, ,
inappropriate in
. 6. 1. 4.
I miss 336. —expose to danger, S. Elect. 986.
shrink from, decline, Antig. 420.— despise,
Apoll. 2. 98.
,
., ,
speech, verbose, tedious, II. 215. . 9j, the neglecting
of one's person,

2, I displease, offend, Od.


,,
387.

. austerity, Goloss. 2. 23.— the exposing of

, ?,
invisible vanished, one's self to danger.

4. 11.

.
, , .
obscure, uncertain —secret,
obscurity, secrecy. neut.
-
tain,
from
must
,
it is necessary to abs-

abstain, 1. 2. 34.

, ,,
plur. used adverbially, most secretly, a priv. separated for holy purposes,

, , , ,
,
y, obscurity, the
from sound, unblemished— simple,
plain, upright, Polyb. 26. 10. 8.

, , ,, ,, ,
, soundness of
frowns, caprice of fortune, Isthm. 4. 52.
the want of dignity, mind, simplicity, Acts 2. 46. Long. 34.
Thuc.

—bury—

, ,
I cause
2. 37.

, —
f.

, , . , , . ,
, ,
,
disfigure,
I cause to disappear, steal
Mat.
myself to disappear, withdraw from
public view, vanish,

,
appearing in public, retirement,
the not
9. 1.
6. 16.
adv. simply, with simplicity, without
anger or indignation,
or plainly dressed, Polyb. 39. 1. 4.
f.

drag away, Hec. 141. force violently


draw away, attract, 4. 5. 6.
simply


f. Hear, pull,

, ,
ing, extinction,

,. .
,
Heb. 8. 13.
, vanished, Luke 24. 31. extinct,
,, disappear- or also ,, 6, a

yearly produce, revenue, II. a. 171. wealth.


,

, ,,
f. -,
I creep, sneak away, depart,
If.

-, ,
^,
. 60.— obscure,
ed, Pyth. 11. 46.

, ,)
humble, Nem. 8. 58.
adverbially, unobserved, unheed-
Theo. 27. 64.
ov, not to be borne,
,
one who is not a domestics/si.
,

, ,
, I fasten from, Theo. 22. 52. take

-
Ion. f. I
adv. (from therefrom, im- the lead, lead the way, . 10.—2. 3. re-

,
-, more
,

mediately, II. a. 349. swiftly, comp.
. 31
late, Herod. 1. 2.
— •/•/, }~

,
swift, II. 1.


f. I snatch

from, plunder , q, a narrative, narration, Herod.

-,
pick offcrumbs, Anacr. 9.

seize greedily, 2. 3; 3. 125.

-/,
,
Trach. 557. steal a kiss.
,—

, , , - ,, )
, a touch, the sense of touching—
a joint kindling, Herod.
7. 215. about the lighting of lamps, about
the time in which the lamps are lighted.

,, post, am
I sit apart,
I
II. o.

absent in the day,


ov,

,
{,
q,
106.
spend the day away from
Dem.
incorruptible.
freedom from corruption
238. 9.
my

,
,
, ;
f. ma

Apoll. 2. 710.
I touch, feel, handle,
for
he found him handling, 11. . 322.
ov, not to be spoken of, obscure,
or decay, incorruption, 1 Cor. 15. 42.
ov, unutterable
mute, silent tongue,
inarticulate
386.
ov, not vocal, mute, Mus. 102.

, &.
— — —

,
&5

,,, not subject to decay, imperish- ,,,, thou hast come, or arrived, Od.
226

, ,,
ov, e.

able,


, ,
,

,
, 46. II. .
ov, not subject to envy, unenvious
liberal, abundant, A. 3. 1. 13. a,

freely.
adv. without envy, liberally,

, .
f.

imp.
395.

,
,
171. sub.

, -
thou shalt come at, Od. 39.
come to me, befell me, II. .
Ion. for
proceeded into, Herod. 8. 56.
they got,
shall reach, 11. . 63.
.

, , ,
vied, opp. to
5j,

ov,
abundance, 1.4. 17.
not an object of envy, unen-


Agam. 948.
, ,
for

S. 82.
for
they plunged in, 5. 49.
they advance into,

, . , ^,
9 f. van» f. I place , patron of the suppliant,
away — M. Supp. 1.

,
displace, Helen. 280. namely, Jupiter,

\ ,,
, » , , ,
was placed or removed here,
imp. — f. -,
331.
im[>. turn, Herod.
02, 1.
y, departure, arrival
69.
at, re-

, , ,
,
transposition

,—
,.
pass,

aor.
off—hurl— dismiss,

,
1. pass,
dispatch, divorce
quit put off my urn, forsake, abandon,

ac-

Mat. 6. 12.— put forth my voice, utter, Mark


aor.

I
1.

f. , aor. a-
send away, put

by ov, friendless, Ajax, 624.
Helen. 53 l.unbefriended by friends,
destitute of friends
ly, Again. 806.

2 Tim. 8. S.
adv. unkind-

ov, an enemy of what is good,

,
&,

, ,
, , —
put off my duty, neglect, omit, ,
, , not a lover of money.
IS. 57.

, .
imp. of

Mat. IS. 23. leave behind, permit,
', ,,
he ignominiously dis-
,, 1 Tim. 3. S.
,
, «j, not selfish, disinterested,

,
, ,
missed him, II. a. 25. aor. 1. and -, unbeloved, (Ed. C. 1777.
he sent from his hand, launched, II. aor. 2. I fly away,
. .
,.
372. 587.— disappear, A.
115. Ion.
Herod. 3. 119. aor. 2. .,.,..
he dismissed,
they
II. v.

ov,
1. 5. S.
unfit for, unskilled in, riding,

, , ,
,
two dismissed their thirst, allayed, Ay.

,
641. 1. 15.
subj.
), , ),
for may hurl, II. <zr. 590. ride depart on horseback.

, ,,, ,. \>. , ,.-


,,
off,
optat. or might throw, y.817. f. I off, A. 1.5. 12.
ride
part, having dismissed, for , sj, want of skill, inability, to

, , , ,- ,, ,
Herod. 60, having sent away.

fling, imperat.
9. 18.
fat. part, for
Ion.
7.

dis-
about to
ride,

-, .,
imp.
8. IS.
^, — inf.
f.

miss thou, drop from thy hand, offer, Orest. — inf. aor.
— imp. by trans,
1.
2. stand away, stand aloof, II. .
I
I disengage myself, withdraw, 2. l. 8. . —
849. place at a distance— withdraw, deter
kxui'j

ingly disengaged himself from the govern-


ment, leg. 7. 11. /•'

,,
the horse having put himself forth into
(for ,), he will-

,,

,
cause to revolt, detach from the interest

,,
of a person, A. 6. 6. 18.— hang as in a ba-
lance, weigh, try,

,,
imp.
2. 20.— .
I stand away, withdraw
speed, hastened its pace.

— the remitting
, dismissal, release of a captive
or forgiving a debt while
yet unpaid, Deut. 15. 3. remission of sins, —
Mat. 26. 28. i. e. the forsaking of their sins
on the part of men, and the forgiving of
,
-,
myself, recede, revolt— apostatize.

, ,
1850.
ov, to, the extremity of the stern.
the quarter-badges.
ov, unburnt, unparched, Helen.
things altogether
unroasted, quite raw, Apoll. 1. 1074.

,
past tins on the part of God a starting•
place, S. Elect. 688. speed, impetuosity.

,, , . ,
6, foam, for

II. . 608.
from

,
,,
,
,
o, one who is skilful in letting off

an engine, a shooter, Polyb. 4. 46, 3.


Prom. 671.
ov, dismissed, loose,
,,
,-,
ficent,

, •/,
or
Olym.
a, ov, wealthy
from 7. 2.
muni-

adv. that which happens unseen, from


, ,,
the starting-post. sudden, Acts 2. 2.
, a shooter, deliverer, an epi-
&,, ov, , tj,

,
fearless, intrepid.

, , - ,-,,
thet of Apollo, U. /. 404. having no fear of justice, no

, I deliver from under a curse dread of vengeance, (Ed. T. 904.


f.

by expiation — I expiate, purify adv. without fear, in security without —


myself, Euin. 448. dread of punishment, impudently, Jude lii.

, ,, , ,
,
Ion. ov, fearless in bowels, un-
I come, go away
: but octto daunted in heart, Ranae, 99.
in verb points to the place understood
tliis

where motion begins, and it therefore means


, r„ Ion. departure, recess,
Ecoles. 1059.— return, Herod. 4. 79.
I come to, arrive at, Od. £ 159. impel•. ov, unhallowed bv Phoebus, uh-

Q
— — —— —
227
,
,. , , ., ,,
pure,
, .
oojif

a hand not unjustified by Apollo, Eum.237.


,
, , sc. with
tribe, 11. /. 63.
,
,
, having no kindred or
228

,
adv. without dread or horror, cc,

,
, , f. I take the exact image of a
person or thing, Ax. 3. 10. 2. 02,
Call. 3. 65.
ov, o, foam, II. . 559.
, Mark froth.

, ., ,
I am like, Heb. 7. 3. — foam, am co-

,
f. f. I

, f. /, I put away my arms— dis- vered with foam,


,
. 282. .
9. 1 8.

, , ,
arm, II. -. 26.
, foam-producing Venus.
f. I see at a distance — turn
I or /, foaming, cover-
away my eyes, . ed with foam, Antip. Thess. 26.

.,
7. 1.
1 they smite the enemy looking away,
8, ,
producing foam, said of the

,they attack them in the rear direct my
attention from one thing to another, in-

,, , ,
spect, study model, Heb. .2. 2. «two,
ov, not to be borne, insupportable.
lettuce, Philoct. 30.
,
,
, foam, full of foam.
like
the principle of love per-
?,

,,
sonified, Venus, the goddess of beauty-
, . 5. 4. 58.
or Att.
f. , I separate a
lust. 2. 8.21.
,
a temple or statue of Venus.

, ,
thing by assigning to it fixed limits, define, roe, the rites of Venus, sensual
Long. 8.— separate a person from his coun- indulgences, E. 5. 4. 4.
/n/,banish —
excommunicate, Luke 6.22.

,— ,, - .
inf. to gratify Ve-
separate a person for a particular purpose, nus, indulge, I. 3. 16. aor. 1. pass.
select, appoint, Acts 13. 2. separate a — I suffered pollution, was vio-
*j-

thing from its oumer, alienate, defraud, Al- lated, ., 3. 4.

^, , ,
cest. 36.
occasion, opportunity pre-
text, motive, cause — — , 6, vj, c.
devoid of reason, irrational unwise,

s.


the means of gaining
.
,
foolish, opp. to mad, extravagant,

,
any end, the materials of a work,
11.


2. 7.
art or profession as the means of living
provision, subsistence— a capital, Dem.
,
opp. to

,
madly, through stupidity,

adv. irrationally,
1 .6. 1 9. ,

I am unwise, or
. \.

,
f.
186. 18.

,
f. ,, I
',, 2,
hasten away, march
mad, II, o. 114. act unbecomingly, II. /3.258.
, —infatuation

,
off, «j, folly, madness
E. 7. 5. 7.— — .

, , temerity, 3. 1. 10.

,
;

might sally forth, II. . 794? adj.— heed-

-,
ov,
a fugitive — hasty, (Ed. C. 238. —unawares, Again.
ov,
,
.
less, neglectful, 2. 6. 6.

-
f.

from harbour, Iphig. T. 1 8. ,


I set sail, sail away, convey 1379. unconcerned for
carelessly, negligently, ovx, not
adv.

-,sung without a lyre, Eum. 333.


, ^.

,
without care or anxiety, Med. 914.
.
harsh or mournful,
;, -,. ,
,
to be unconcerned for,

,
1 .6. 9.

.
1

,
ov, unproductive, barren, O. 20. 3. I am unmindful of, neg-
— free from tribute, , lect, A. 5. 4. 10.

. -, , —

, , . ,,, , ,,. \- , barrenness

.
sterility of intel- ov, ungarrisoned.
lect, stupidity, 2. 4. ,
Sid. 29. ,
ov,
55.
unstained with "blood, Antip. ,, I sprinkle, aor. 1.
sprinkle myself, Ion. 97.
c. naturally unapt, unto-
,
m.

I reject as unclean, abo- ward, dull, opp. to 1. 6. 19. .


2, ,
minate, Plut.
expiate, Dem.
6.

,
231. atone for afoul deed, adv. without natural aptitude,

,
60. ult.
,
1 1
to be unfit, ill dis-

.
, ,,
(pen. short) insensate, un- posed, little qualified, ,

.
fatuated,
,
wise—unconscious dead, Od.
. 282.
475. in-
adv. unwisely.
. — ,natural inaptitude, dullness.
,
,
or jj, anchovy, Equit. 642.
,

-
or ov, not to be avoided,

^, —
,
uQoxho), I am unwise, rash, Od. /}. 294, unerring shaft— irresistible charms inex-
, Dem. *j, unskilfulness, II. . 368. rash- tricable chains, Pyth. 2. 75. adv.

02,
, ,,
ness, folly, 421. ult. inevitably, Herod. 9. 116.
ov, inexplicable, unexpected,

, /, ov, unguarded, unprotected



place, Herod.
dently, S. Elect. 127C.
into the most secret
adv. impru-
5. 92. ^, — unawares, II.. 1. 6.

ed against, inevitable, Plut.



19. not to be guard-
9. 82.— incau-
tious, rash
, adv. unguardedly.

021.
657.

without a deck.
•;,

,
imfenced, unwatched, Ajax,
unawares, uncautiously bound, Hipp.
unfenced ships, i. e.
,
apprehensive,
unguarded,
f.

is

} ,
..6.5.
lam offmy guard, am in-

neglected, Polyb. 7. 15,


negligence, 4. 10, .
isleft
6.
— — —— — ———

,
I

,,
229
- ,, , A 230
ov, leafless,

Orest. 383. applying the suppli-


cations of a leafless mouth, i. e. a tongue

.
withered with disease, or supplicating with

,
,
,,
and
ov, not made with hands, not
constructed by human art, Mark 14. 58.
ov, not made or reared with hands,
, without hands.

,
, ,
,
,
f. ,
words only, without the garland usually

,
carried by a suppliant, a,

, ,
ov, having no tribe, uncongenial.
rouse from sleep,Rhesus, 25.
f.

he withdrew to sleep, Luke


-&,
I sleep, aor. 1.
(Ed. C. 730.— unsubdued, Thuc.
and
vided Acharnania from iEtolia

scil.
belonging to the Achelous
cities near the sea, Achelous
beinganameforwateringeneral,Persce,866.
,a river which di-

, ,, ,
8. 23.

,, .
, a muddv stream, a torrent,
. 495. from
6, ,
, a species of thorn, a sloe tree,

, ., -,, ,
II. Anthol. 1. 490. Od. f. 10.
f.— pour OUt,Od. f. I ovtoc, 6, a river of Epirus Acheron, —
. 204. draw exhaust, a. 171. —
forth, II. a river of hell hades, —
, water, fertilize,
ov,
Med. 836.
unplanted, 0. 20. 22. tloc, v\,
a, ov,
the white poplar, II. v. 389.
of Acheron.

,
,
2 Pet.
speechless,

-,
, . ,
,
ov,

2. 10.

,,
,
ov,
dumb

,
— irrational,

speechless, (Ed. C. 1348.


muteness, silence.
mute
adv. without voice,
brute,

AX02,
, for,
,,
tuneful, Eur. Elect.
151. shrill, hoarse grasshopper.
grief, sorrow, anguish,
a sorrow which renders life lifeless,

,
embitters life, Ion. 763.

,
,
^' ,, ',
,
,, , , , $
,
,
unillumined, dark,
,,
,
,
,
ov,
Aehsea, Greece.
fern. adj. belonging to Greece.

Grecian
Grecian
cities.
,

women.
f.

groan, II. /3. 694. 869.



sc.
grieving in heart, having heart-felt
grief, II. . 399.
> I grieve,

Od. r. 129.
I grieve,

,,
,
Grecian, of Greece. A^ati-
ov, I feel sorrow, am in pain for.

,,,
more Grecian, more suitable to the scil. grieving in my mind,
Greeks, Polyb. 26. 2.—
cian

,,
brass,

and
dle, unbridled,
ov

,
,

,,
the Greeks.
, a Gre-

ov, without a bri-


1. 5. 3.
,
not secured with
unarmed, unprotected, (Ed. T. 200.
,
—licentious tongue.
Od.

becomes
11.

II.

,,
heart,
.
.
.

524. part,
125.
II. .
,
,
318. with the genitive as expressing
the cause of the grief, Od.

773.
,
,
139.

,
.
grieving,
scil.
I grieve,
c. gen.
sad in

,,
a house without brass, a Dor. I resound, echo,
poor
,
,
cot. for the} warble, Theo. Ep. 4. 10.

>\, ,
,
65. a augm.
,
. ov, unarmed with brass.
one who gapes, needy, Anacr.
Imperat.

,,
beat, c. ace. 2. 36.

, ,
6, , also
do thou cause to sound,

gap- ?^,
, , yawning widely vast, im-
mense army, Plut. 9. 436. deep sea.
— ing from want, poor, needy,Theo. 16. 38.
a augm. , <, gaping for a thing.

,—- .
a chasm or mouth dark and deep
— fixed in stupor or amazement, Polyb.
7. 17. 5.
AX APIS, gen.
/,

cious, disagreeable
—— ov, ungra-
unthankful, Ax. 2.2.1.
Agam. 427,

aor. ,,, ,, ,
in the vacuity, i. e. in the ab-
sence,of the eyes, all love vanishes,
— f. or
I am laden — am
,
laden

,
1.

-,
—grating, Cycl. 487. opp. to with sorrow, I grieve, am pained, II. . 361.

, ,

Phoen. 1 745. an ungrateful re-
turn «p^/s-acadv.ungraciouslyjungrate-

-,,,,
fully, disagreeably.
I
— experience ingratitude, Polyb.
am ungrateful, At. ,

1.
am grieved to do a thing, am reluctant,
loath, E. 5. 2. 7.

,

am grieved at the con-
duct of another, am angry, displeased, aor.
they were indignant,

7.4.3. .
— a load

,
2.2.2.

,, ,
11. 8.

,
, ,, ,
,
, ungraceful,
,
, ingratitude, . 1.2.
ov, inelegant.
7.
23.
of evil, grievance, sadness, trouble, calamity,
Prom. 26. Et.
n, ov,
1. 4.
grievous,
aload

, ,
^^-., ,
ov,

»,
,
, , a borough of
by the Athenian
,
the Acharnians.
peopled
tribe

one of the Acharnians, an Acharnian.


ov, unexposed to the storm.
Attica,
called (Eneis.—
a citizen of Acharna, plur.
6,

,
,
],
. the most burdensome thing in life,
4. 8. 1.

f.

odious, Hipp. 94.
adv. with regret, reluctantly, E. 4. 8. 27.
,
, carrying a burden, a carrier,
a beast of burden,
,
Herod. 7. 18 7.
I bear a burden, carry.

,
, the bearing a burden,
Q2
1 — — — — ——
23)
, , or the son of , , Ail
unfit for use— use-
232

,
A%tfthevi,or or
#£?£, ^^,
e^i, ov*

, ,, ,
Peleus and Thetis—
37, of, of Achilles.
or

without a coat, wearing simply


less —
sluggish, unproductive, O. 17. 14.
worthless as withoid Christ, Philem. 1L•
ineffectual, Iphig. T. 121,

, ,
a waistcoat, called
a coat,
1. 6.2.

7>— ,
,
and not also
under the pallium,

6, v\, unclad, poorly clad.

tattered clothes, Helen. 1298.


— , .
. -,
, &**
,
marriage barren of happiness, wretched

&XQh

,
adv. without use or benefit.
adv. as far as until,
until dawn,

,
until now.
until which time, while, Rom. 11.
-

, of verdure, barren, Helen. 1343.


,
, mist, fog, Acts 13. 11.— dark-
destitute

,
,
,
25.
an interval of five days, Acts 20. 6.
,, ,
until five days,.after

colourless, unblushing,

,,
,
ness,

&, , am
11. i.

f. ikjo},
696.
darkened, Od.
misty, dark,
nst «J» chaff, husk, mote foam, froth
.

1
. 4Q6.
59. ,
,
,,
ov,
ov,
ov,
,
,
unadorned with gold.
without juice or sap, sapless,
chaff, palea, Mat. 3.12.
, a heap of chaff", II. e. 502.
— sea-weed, 1..428. a tear, dew, Trach.


, -, , , . q, a place in which the chaff*

,861. the down upon fruit


frothy wine, Orest. 115.

, ~, .
is


collected, a heap.
not to be separated, inseparable
ov,
18. 7.

, , ,,
, without down, beardless, not contained, not comprehended or ad-

,
Philip 21, a priv. mitted in either party, A. 9. 5.

, -. ,
ov, devoid of gall, rage-allaying, Od. adv. back, backward, retro, II. a. 60.
, , freedom from —

, .,
. 221. anger. ov, untouched, unconsumed not

, , ,
unsupplied with means, in-
digent, A. E. a. 8.—
of means, indigence.

,
op,
the want

ov, not accompanied with


,
touching, CEd.T. 988.—
out touching,
,
and
sure, harmless, S. Elect.
,
adv. with-

ov, without cen-


499.— blameless,

,
-, ,,
,,
, ., ,
.
, ,
, —
a dance joyless, S. Elect. 1075.
, a wild pear-tree, Eccles.S54.
,
ov,
pure, bright water,
undefined, iphig. A. 1574. un-
,
Theog. 797.

infallible,
,
,
free from falsehood, true
Here. F. 59.
without deceit or falsehood.
— adv,

soiled, Theo.
also ?, a, ov, Ion.
ov,

less member, hurtful


fective, cowardly.
or useless to himself,
1.

useless servant, sluggish, unprofitable


60.
ov,
use-
useless soldier, inef-

coward, II.
,


i. e.
^, looking
like a

silly
,
,
f. I do not lie, tell the truth; am
faithful, sincere,

ov,
ov,

his suffrage, Vespas, 750.


,—
Dem.

&, , -.
459. 20.
unshaved, unsmoothed.
unvoted, one who has not give»

, ov, wormwood,

,
/3.269. —
useless scheme, unavailable, unsuc-
cessful, Eur. Elect. 883. Herod. 1. 191. '
,,
absinthium, Rev. 8. 11. A. 1. 5. 1.
4 a handling, fastening c,


adv. without effect, without biting,
Theo. 25. ' \, the meshes of a net, II. . 487.

the felloes

.
gently, 72. of a wheel a wheel, Hipp. 1233. chariot,
Od. a. 162, she laughed without the use or

, Ion. 88. an arch— —


the firmament, fr.

, ,
command of her organs, she involuntarily
or unconsciously laughed.

"
thus expressed in Od.
This same idea
347. 6 ' ,
- -, ,
«» , , f.I tie to the meshes of a net.
a joint ra the things

,
is v. to,
(for tyihcov, contr. of — joined, the limbs bonds, Paul. Si!. 7.

not tfieir
they laughed with jaws
with jaws of which they
own, i.

had not the use or command, with invo-


e.

,

§ - and

adverbially,
ov, flowing back, ebb-
ing — retrograde back,Il.<£>.456.—
-

,
luntary jaws. From this
differs, as meaning a laugh of malignity or

,, ,
.
152, his breath again collected
within his breast, i.e. he again revived— in
, (.
,
&,,
a grin that betrays gall at heart. return, Od. /. 501.

,,
f. I render useless, aor. 1. pass. ov ov, noiseless, Ajax,

,
they became unprofitable, 321. adv. without noise, silent-

?, ,
, ,
Rom. 3. 12. Dem.

, .
ly, 797. 12.
—not
.
T«T0f,unprofitablcnes9, uselessness. ov, lifeless, 1 Cor. 14. 7. ani-

,
6, , having no money, mal food, Hipp. 952.— inanimate, ,
poor, Med. 461. , ,, lifelessness, timidity, faint-
, the want of gain or wealth, ing, Alcest. 7. 27.
indigence, Od.

poverty,
,
Thuc,
p.

1
,
.
502.

1
the want of
1
supplies,
,unalluring, Polyb.
f. «ofifj I breathe
ov,
9. 1. 5.
— repose, aor. . ,
not captivating the soul,
— — — — — — — —
£33
we

, ,
spent the night, Od. . , must
«34

,
367. imp. aov... to, frequent, Nubes, 414.

,
ue, contr. , he breathed, uttered with his

, walk I go, Plut. 90. f. m. /3<*-

, , .
breath, spoke. I will proceed, Dem. 314. 21.
ata, f.

,
,, , ,, I breathe, aor. 1. we
reposed, slept the night, Od. y. 151. inf. at-
in the sense of the imperat., do thou
adv. step by step, slowly.

, ,
,a
walking, Vesp. 1168.
gait, 27.

sleep,
,,
,
-,
o.

,,)
40. , 6, a walker, courser, Med. 1 ? 78-

,
inf. to breathe, blow, Od. y. , ov, expeditious, Ranae, 1 28.
,
,
.
, &,
183. poet, for to blow, II.
214. ate;?, plur. «syreg•, blowing, s. 526.
imp. eejjj/, blew, Od. 325. . part.
. 32.
f. I speak, II. . 92. blab, Od.

ov, a vain prattler.

, ,,
blown upon, tossed by the wind, ov, o, (from ascent — step-
Od. . 131. iinrie/, is carried by the wind, —elevation, rank, Tim.
ladder 1 3. 13.

, a threshhold — entrance on
,is spread, Isthra. 4. 15. imp.

tated, II.
,
.
386.
was agi-

^, Pyth.
life, —the base of a
5. 8.
, a —the base of a
statue.

^, . , . ,
eof, yielding no smell, scentless, a ov, step statue,,
priv. pedestal— footstool — foundation, Olym. 13.

-, -
ov, or ov, unseasonable, pre- 9. T. 962.
seat, Iphig.
— ,
mature
,
deformed, ugly,
of the feet not in season, i.
. 89.
e.
1. 3. 14.
weak or unfit
said
s.
Ha, Ion. v,
or
c.
deep deep
or

, -
to move, Od. Damm, 1789, derives bosom, full, spacious, U./3.

560. deephai?;

, , ,,,,,
it from a priv. and oqa, and renders it long, K. 4. 8. deep darkness, intense, Od.
immoveable. /. 144. —
deep wood, thick, II. 415. deep . —
or a bad season, inclemency, corn, tall, E. 3. 2. 13. II. /3. 147.— deep
Plut. 7. 276. scil. unsea- wealth, vast, ample deep good, great —
sonably, Acharn. 24. or adv. deep storm, black, tempestuous deep morn, —

,
,
at,

, ,
priv.
Dor. for ,
unseasonably, Theo. 11.40. prematurely.
^.
, ,, .gen. the morning
early dawn, Luke 24. 1.

deep soil, fertile
deep sleep, sound, profound.
adv. deeply, profoundly.
, —
,
,
star, Eur. Elect. 730. depth, 7. 5. 5. breadth,
—indulge
, , , , f.

freshing sleep, II. . 159.


ov, , or
I

ov,
cull flowers

a flower, the
re-

,
opp. to
3. for
the pathetic.
depth of mind, Polyb. 27. 10.
in Long. 2. 1, read ,

,
,
II. /. 657*

-
), / -
,
,
finest of the kind,

.
.
exquisite flower of linen, the finest linen,
the

in the flower of a sheep,


in the finest wool, Od. a. 433. ,
,
ov,

, , 6,

6,
6, «?, deeply wise, Pers. 142.
deep-soiled, fertile,
deeply, very, aged, yn^ag.
having deep eddies, unfa-

,
,
the flower of sailors, the most expert

^
sailors, Pyth.4. 335.

,
of songs, the most exquisite song.
,
.
the flower

,
,
thomed ocean,

eddies, deeply flowing, U.


Od.
ev,
x. 51 1.

abounding with deep


. 603.

, ,
Nem. 350, the flower of justice, scil. , having deep fame, very
truth,
quence, , .
Sf
the most florid elo-

Olym. 1. 23, he shines in the flower of


glorious, Pyth. 1. 127.
deep-girdled, long-waisted,
ov,
said of women of rank, II. . 590.
music, he is graced with the blooming or- ov, o 7 07, deep-bosomed, long-

,,
^,
naments of the muses.

B. ,
,
, ,
waisted, i. e. noble woman, II. a. 339.
fertile,

craggy,

opulent, Paul.
Pyth.

Nem.
9.
ov,

ov,
9. 95.
rich,
177.
having banks
>

deeply rich, ample fortune,


Sil. 71.
,
steep

and

,,
,
,
,
alas.
AAA, Heb.
£,
booty! Luc. 1.
bWD., an idol meaning lord.

626.
I strange, bless me,
what a

q, the capital of Assyria-—


rich

,
, ,
, , -
ov —
ing fertile or extensive meads, II. /. 151.
ov, having deep corn, fruitful.
7\), II. . 551.
ov, thick-woolled, fine-fleeced
,, hav-

€-
,
a, ov,of Babylon, Babylonish shin, Pyth. 4. 286.

,, ,
)
run, opp. to
scil.

Att.
f. I ,
the Babylonians
yq, the land of Babylon.

—walk and not ride, opp.


walk and not
, ,
counsel, profoundly wise,
f.
ov,

p.
Mo\.
Nem.

make deep, deepen,


pass,
392.
deep in

to —
Walk and not stand, move, go
.

9/ -/\tt.

(Zauvvt,
I
Luke 6. 48, he dug and
— —— — — —

, ,
,
235
deepened,, .
render deep,

,, ,,
e.
II.
he dug deepJy
. 421.
thick-wooded, Bacch. 1 1 36.
ov,
— excavate,
,
ing mostly in the

,
{,
having ascended,
compound form,
xvx-
descended.
%,, for e£n, he went to, II. . 152.
as in
£36

,
ov, widely levelled, a plain deeply for he went to go, hastened

,
",
embosomed by hills, Nem. 3. 30. to go, . 167. /3jj ' he hastened to

,
, , § , ,,
,
richly stored heart, Crinag. 17.
6,

r„
5j, deep-curled.
having deep wealth,
drive, he hastily drove, II. v. 27.
Sxvxtoio
«ij-

II. . 302, for

whom the fates of death

,
,
,,
deeply flowing, very deep, pea, II.

,, . ,
,
,
,
, long-bearded.

8. 195.
deep-rooted, Apoll. 1 1199.
deeply dug, S. Elect. 437.
deeply shaded,Theo. 4. 19.
,
.
.
went taking away— whom the ministers of
death, i. e. fate, took away.

or
, ), a robe with figures on it like the
palm-leaves,

small, Pyth.
^, 1 Mace.

9.
,
134.
ov,
13. 37.

.—,
short, unimportant,
II. .

,
broad-breasted, ample-bo- adverbially, a little, smallest, . 380.

,, ,
ov,
somed earth, Nem. 9. 59. Bxityi, , 7], a covering, cloak, bag, garment,

,,
,,
deeply fixed, said of a Theo. 3. 25. Herod. 4. 64.
ponderous 6tone, Philip. 74. — ,
to, a square or ob-

,
,
fate,

. ,
,
Nem. , , ,
ov,

7. 1.
bearing tall reeds,
, depth.
deep-minded, inscrutable
\.
II. . 3S3. long stone of a black colour used in ancient
times instead of a statue to represent God,
Heb. *? \T)0, a house of God.
k

— or ,,

,Mosch.

, ,
,
, €—,
Idyl. 5.

,,
ov, broad-leaved

having deep, i. e. long hair.


deep-soiled, fertile, Septem,
plane-tree, a stick, staff— a prop, Hec. 281.— a badge
of authority, sceptre, rod, Dem. 298. 6.
the use of a stick to guide
a blind person, Phcen. 1534.

,
304. or tloc, ), the fox glove

,,
Bxiu, a bath, a liquid-measure, Heb.
Bx'iov,
15.
,,
I go
a branch, of the palm, John 12.
n, ov, made of palm branches.


go on, march, proceed, .
. , -
or ladies glove, the blue bell flower.
6, a poetic name

for wine, Bacchus the god of wine, he is

,,
,
also called
,
I . 3.


3.
— go up, climb, mount, ascend, A. 2.
go after, follow, II. 149. go to an
enemy, assail, attack, II. . 21. go by, pass

.


,
, ,
Bacchus, Equit. 407.
,
, a shout in honour of

, ov, of Bacchus,

, ,
go about a person to defend him, succour, Ion.

,
II. q. 510. go aivay, fly, depart, vanish, II. inspired by Bacchus, Bacchanalian.
S. 229. .
16.— go down, descend, 167. . ,, a temple of Bacchus re- —
— ,
, , ,
go through, cross, traverse, II. 9•. 343.

,
velry, Phosn. 21. his rites.

,go near, approach, Isthm.


f. wo), I he caused to
go, aor.
mount cr embark, Herod. 1. 80. he
1 . ,,
2. 1 6.

,
f. I am inspired with Bacchus,
revel, rage, Antig. 140.
, fury, inspiration, Long. 32.
caused to come down, brought down, II. g. , Bacchanalian fury, re-

,, ^,,,,
164. Hence it appears that the first aorist

, —,
velry, Bacch. 608. the or-

, ,,
So has
of
aor.
this verb has a transitive sense.
m. for he mounted
,
gies of Bacchus.
, a devotee of

,,
1.

,
q,
the chariot, II. y. 262. f. 1. Ion.
),
Bacchus— a frantic woman, Hec. 133.

,
by inserting /, while I shall the influence, act the part,
I feel
go, II. . IIS. f. 1. m. will go, will of Bacchus, Bacch. 929.
— —
become

,,,
of, II. . 339. Dor. for Bacchus,

,
will go, Theo. 4. 26. a furious, Bacchanalian.

,
new verb : hence

, , ,
the imperf.
,,
he mounted, II. s. 745.
for ,--
the
Ionic form, will go on in life, live, II. #.431.
Bx\xvxy^x,
a bolt, a key.
bars or bolts, Polyb.

sj, an instrument to remove

7. 16. 5.

— will go by the will of another, obey, shall

plup.

contr.
1 34. inf.
about
-/,
, , \, ,
be ruled by, II. o. 194. perf.

',
gone, is accustomed to go, Isthm. 4. 71.

,, , ,,, /, ,,
for had gone, was
gone, went, II. sr. 856. perf. m.
have passed, are gone, U. .

ki?n,
aor. 2. ,
defend, protect him,
inf.
has

to go

, part,
II,

, . 510.
exist-
,
of, or attendant at, a bath.

— chesnut—
f.

,,a
I furnish a bath, Pax,

ing acorns or dates.

hardv, Herod.
balneum, O.
, acorn— date, A.
bolt,

,
6,

1.
bath,

gland

6,
66. >
k, feeding
, , the keeper

1 103.
9. 5.
1. 5.

bear-

on acorns,
10.
— —

,
, ,
I

,
237

\,
\, ', ,(
f.

f. ,, I
BAN
shake down
the aooms.
I bolt, bar, stop, Pax, 361.
stopped up, Eccles. 370.
, a money-bag, Luke
a cut-purse, pick-pocket,
ov,

10. 4.
,
,, )
,
,%
,
a

mechanical,
ov,
talk, rumour, CEd.
BAP
mean employment— vul-
garity, gross profusion, Arist. JEthic.

aor. 2. ,.
. 4.
. 527.
2.
.

f.
238

7.

-,

, .
Ranae, 772.

,
purses, pick pockets,

,
1. 2. 62.
I cut

ihoc, , a place for starting in the


. dip for the sake of dyeing, I
I
dye, stain, Ajax, 95.
draw, Theo. 5. 127.

dip a bucket in -water,

, , ,
chariot race— the goal— the goal of life,

,
Her. F. 867.
or
,

Med. 1245. gable end, pillar, buttress,

a, ov, having a white


immersion, dye, Acharn. 1 1 2.
yj, ov, dyed, coloured, Plutus, 530.

, 6, a priest of Cotys, the goddess

of lewdness, Luc. 3. 1 22.

f.
\,,,^,
,, /,
speck in the forehead, speckled, dappled,
Hec. 90.

sync,

throw,
1.

scatter
aor. 2.

pass,
f. m.

hit, smite, II. a. 53.


— throw

, —
aor.

to another,
f.

^^,
1.
f.

— throw around,
give, deliver,
by

I
f.

dip, baptize,
I plunge

bury, overwhelm, Eum. 15. initiate into a


knowledge of the gospel, Mat. 28. 19.—
— plunge in ivater,
John 4. 2. — plunge in sleep,

plunge in air or wind, purify, 3. 1 1. plunge


in fire*, consume or purify with fire.
I am plunged, Polyb. 3. 72. 4.

throw a net, cast, fling — throw money, —
in —
am baptized I plunge myself, I plunge
deposit — throw in tvater, pour— throw a —
myself in sin, wallow in plunge myself in

, , , ,
sickle, put forth, Rev. 14. 16. throw in — sorrow, submit to, suffer, Mat. 20. 20. —
seed, sow —
put forth leaves', shoot, germi- solemnly engage myself by a public expres-
nate, Theo. on Plants, 9. 22. throw on a — sion of faith, see 1 Cor. 15. 29. Rom. 6. 3.
couch, lay, Mat. 8. 6.
reject, lose,
smote, wounded. II.
put to, . 722. subj.

&,
807.
aor. 2.

throw out of doors,

,,.
she applied,

,,
let us strike
a league, form friendship, II. . 16. pi up. ,,
- for

he
mersion,
Mark 10. 38.
, ,—
he washed himself, Luke

baptism plunging in
,
11. 38.
6,

affliction,

to have the baptism, in


im-

for sQeQ^yxsi,
had smitten, he struck, perf. part,
having thrown or shot. In John 13. 2,
fr.

is understood, and the devil is repre-

sented as hurling himself, when changed


into an arrow, into the heart of Judas,

,
meaning that the traitor formed the sudden
and deliberate purpose, to become an in-
,
,
11. s. 73,

-
he which
them.
I initiate myself,

,
baptism, a baptist, Mat. 3. 1.
,,
or baptism, a baptistery.

'/, ,,,
,,
administered to

, a person who administers

a place for immersion

a deep pit into which cri-


minals were thrown at Athens, E. 1. 7. 10.

, ?^-

, ,.
former against Jesus,

,
for full of pits or caverns.
Od. . 495, being struck or wounded. BAPBAP02, adj. barbarous— barbarous
But this may be taken from the form
^, in origin, i. e. not a Greek or Roman, a

,,
part, hence the optat. barbarian, foreigner, A. 2. 1. 6.— barbarous
2. pers.^f?o, if thou be struck, II. in temper or character, uncivilized, savage
— —

,
v. 288. 751. strike « bargain, make, form, barbarous in speech, foreign, unintelligi-

,,,
II. . 10. he put on himself, . 43.
- ble- adv. barbarously.
IN
lay

,
9. 74.

-,
self,
down

perf. pass.
they
for myself, Pyth. 4. 245.

for
fix in themselves, II.

he threw, Herod.
casting a thing with m} -
conferring, meditating, Herod. 5. 106.
have been laid, Nem.
. 50.

,
,
f. ),
I speak with a foreu
idiom, speak unintelligibly or incorrectly,

Luc. 1. 12. I favour, imitate, the barba-
rians, E. 5. 2. 25.

rism, "A. P. 76.


,6, a foreign idiom, a barba-

,
&, ,
,
11. Ion. have been hit with , ou, belonging to foreigners,

,
1.
arrows, are wounded, II. . 656. 2. pers.
&.,
», ,
,
wounded,
thou art wounded, II. s. 248. plup.
for

,
g.
as many as were
28.
balsam of Mecca or Tolu.
,
,
barbaric, fear or alarm
caused by barbarians, Polyb. i>. 8. 5.
adv. in a foreign tongue, opp. to
A. 1. 8. 1.

,
,o\ jj, using a foreign tongue,
-

, ,) (for from redu-


plicated, I speak much, fail to speak from
haste or fear) falter, stammer, II. . 375.

a furnace,
bourer,
,
, (a man employed in heating

workman,
a mechanic, la-
II. 5. 3. 17,
a foreigner,

a Grecian.
f. , II. 867. .
I render barbarous

I am become a barbarian, i. e.

-^,
alienated from the feelings and manners of

art become a barbarian,


Orest. 485, thou
-
,
^, ,
239

,

,
BAP
,
,, ,
,,
— —

, , encountering heavy
A 2
— — a

340

. ,
or a harp,
make
toils.
-
,
lute, lyre, barbiton,Anacr. V. f. I heavy, load. imp.
^,,for
, (, ,
or
the slowest, II. 309.
a structure of any sort,
.
him to sink,
. 664, oppressed, caused
II.

Od. . 321.— offend, exaspe-


a boat or barge used on the Nile, Herod.
2. 96. —
a citadel, tower, palace.
,
,, .
rate,
oppressed, A.
9.
2. 5. aor. 1. part,
I am loaded or
~

,
BAPT2, v, heavy, heavy-armed, 5. II. .
480, having his hand made
3. —heavy hands, violent, destructive,
16. heavy, wounded in the hand.
II.«. 219. —
strong, robust, firm, q. 48. ,
6, , deep-toned, loud-sound-

,
heavy calamity, pernicious, II. 111.
heavy pain, keen, oppressive, £.41 7.
,,
, ,
.
— heavy
—heavy
ing thunderer.
f.
Pyth. 6. 23.
\,
I am sadly grieved,

, ,,
sound, deep, grave, loud, Od. . 257. ov, heavy-handed, atrocious,

,, -
with age, infirm, dccrepid, (Ed. T. 17. irk- Pyth. 11. 37.
some, dangerous, Dem. 231. 15. neut.
or plur. adverbially, heavily,
,
ing with
heavy-falling
weight,
itb*
i. e. crush-

Eum. 375.
/,
sadly,

,, —
be indignant or displeased at, 1. 7. 1.
they heard with indigna-
.
to take a thing

,,'
ill, to
, ,, , sadly mourning
heavy mourning,grievous sorrow.
-f-dted— the most wretched,

,
tion, A. 2. 1. 7. they heard heavily, are
become dull of hearing, Mat. 13. 15. ^, ,
Phoen. 1S67.
heavy-footed, having a large

, ,,
;, , a weight, burden, load— weight club, Hercules, Philip. 52.
scil.

, —,
of character, dignity, pomp, weight of metal,
force, power, Polyb. 2. 3. 5.

,
weight (i. e, a weighty crown) of glory.

,
a weight of wealth, abund-
a
-,
ov, heavy-weighing, ponderous,

Arist. Ethic, . 8.
I groan heavily, II. x. 364.
,
deeply groauing, a heavy

,,,&,, ,,
ance, Ajax, ISO. Hec. 107, groaner, Dem. 314. 10.— very lamentable,

message.
,
a weight of message, a weighty, afflictive

,
(Ed. T. 1256.
heavy sigh, sadly.
adv. with a

,, . ^,
part,
f.

,
p.

wine, Od. y. 139.

,
1. 366.

,
for
I am heavy, perf.


heavy with
load, overwhelm, Luc.
I am burdened, op-
deeply miserable, Herod.

thundering, Isthm.
,
,
c. heavily afflicted,
1. 45.
deep clashing, loudly
8. 47.

,
,
};,
pressed,

,
Luke 9. 32. 1

grieved, very grievous, Ajax, 200.

.
(Ed. C. 1631.
, ,
Tim. 5. 16.
leavily

very painful, hard death,


pression, Polyb.

ing, M.
Supp. 25.
,
,
1.

drawn out so as to be narrow


heaviness,
31. 7.
ou, very costly—-severe in punish-
gravity—op-

,,
, ,
^,
,
deep-roaring, awfully
sounding Jupiter, An tig. 1129.

ing, .,,
6,

deep-murmuring, loudly roar-


Philip. 76.
or slender, K. 5. 30. pronounced with a
grave tone.
,
6, , heavy-minded, meditat-

ing destructive things, Apoll.



4. 731.

,,,,-,
.
wound, Philoct. 704.

,,
deeply eating or piercing
•,
, heavy-minded, cowardly.
Ajax, 319.
BA2AN02, , the Lydian stone, by which
6,

,, ,
tardy,

, ,
Theo. 18, 10.
6, q,
genius, ill-fated, Alcest. 868.
oppressed by an evil
gold
. 7. 5.
a touch-stone —
is tried, proof,
23.— torment, Luke
violent disease, Mat. 4. 24.
,.
trial,

— examine by
16. 23.—

,
,, '., I am oppressed by a demon, f. I try gold tor-

,
am very wretched, Equit. 555. ture—explore, torment, Mark 8.
, S. 7.

,
.
also,
ding heavy tears, sadly weeping.
fixQvyoOvTrog, ov, or
ing sea, MustE. 270. Mosch. 2. 116.

-,
,,
fhctive fate, Septera, 975.
shed-

loudly roar-

.
dispensing affliction, af-
6. 29.
mented—am found
18.
, torment, Rev.
, a torturer,
a gaoler, Acts 16. 23.
6,
6,
Dem. 978. 1.—
I am

-, ,
tried or tor-
or ascertained, O. 10.
—/3flca«K/s-fo?,wemustexamine,musttry. 14. 11.
1

,
(>,
,;,
,
,
,
,
%, heavy-mi nded, fierce,Med. 17 6.
I am or feel oppressed, II:

rate, Eum. 783.


,
519.
loudly roaring, Pyth. 5. 79.

.
, jj, deeply enraged, invete-

, , uttering bitter things,


reproachful, Pyth. 2, 100.
.
a woman that tries or tortures,

22, ,,,
,
a place of torment.
a king, governor, ruler, a
chief commander— a prince,opp. to
'/
Mat. 5. 38.
ages, eternal
the Great King, i. e. God,
king of
king, 7•.
, .
Ran. 844.

,
—— —— —

,
241 24
— carry mind, comprehend,

,
kings from kings, kings descended from a help, assist

,
in

, , --
,
royal.

, , , ,
line ofrc^al ancestors--«$>eftWy,princely,

,,
a princely man.
more regal, nobler, II. . 160.
most worthy of a king.
a, ov, or ov, Ion. , be-
weigh, Thesm. 444. perceive, Prom. 886.
, a thing
,
a load.
borne, Meleager, 7.
ov,

ov, an effeminate person, a man


smutty or phlegmatic, Dem. 288. 17.
carried,

, ,, ,

,,
Ion.

,

longing to a king kingly, royal.

kingdom a queen, Theo. 24. 71.


sc.
scil. a

the house of a
,, ,
or a tomb, grave— a rising
ground, said to be the tomb of the amazon
Myrine in front of Troy. It seems to be
the Chaldean wrO, or the Heb. a

,, ,
king, palace, A. 3. 4. 15. used generally in house, or the grave, which is the last home
the plural, (^, Ion. a , of man. Hence the meaning of Homer, II.
palace.
,, , . 813, when he says that the immortals

, f.

, ..
reigning, ruling,
sway, At. 4. 3. 14.
Rom. 5. 14,•

,
royal, kingly, Hipp. 1281.
I hold the rank, exercise

the function, of a king, part.

, , ,, , , ,- has the chief



triumph, prevail,
6. 12.
called the rising ground

of the Trojans, it was named


i. e. it was

so called in thepolished language of Greece,


whereas by men, i. e. in the vulgar dialect

ov, accessible, passable, Polyb. 10. 8.


7. intelligible to all, ah. 539. from

, having the appearance or
dignity of a king, royal, princely, magnifi- , f.

while they copulate, Theo.


I mount,
1. 87.

,
cent, At.

,
4. 2. 11.
of a king, or of ruling, At. 2. 1. 17.

,
-
the art
a, ov,
one who mounts
6,
disposed to mount, lecherous, Pho-

,
adv. in a princely style, with royal cyl. 176.

., ,
magnificence.
— ,
ov, 0, Heb. a bath, a liquid measure

,
,
of a king, a queen, princess, O. 19. 5.
, the consort containing seven gallons and a half.
ov, q, a bush, bramble, Luke 6. 44.
,,

,
q, a thicket, Olym. 6. 90.

,
ov, 6, a little king a basilisk, or

, , , ,
fabulous serpent, called also a cockatrice.

, - ov, Plutus, 1012, a little bush, a

, , ,,
4 a going, gait, walk, term of endearment.

, -
a footstep, spokes or q, a thorn-back, Vesp. 510.

. ,
summits of the wheels, S. Elect. 720. abounding with brambles.

, a well-scented, sagacious, move-



ment, Ajax, 8. foundation, hence basis.

202, , , ov, passable, opp. to , I


ov, 0, a frog, Mosch. 3. 111.
act like a frog, swim, croak.
q, a garment of a frog colour,

, , ,
,
,
6 or , (an invidious talker,
one who speaks for the purpose of sorcery,
or one who uses charms, from
speak ; or, as some will have it, from
to
Equit. 1406.

and mice, a poem ascribed to Homer.

,
,
ov, 0, (N°n. bada) a liar, babbler.
q, battle of the frogs

, I kill with the eyes) an enchanter,


a sorcerer, Plutus, 571. adjectively, de-

,
ceitful, malignant, envious, Dem. 267. 8.

,
,
blab, feign, falsify,
f.

',
stutter,
I use vain repetitions,
Mat. 6. 7.
stammer, Luc. 2. 673.

,
q, envy, malignity, Dem. 811. Bsii/^y, Dor. f«, I bark, Theo. 6.
f.

—howl

,, , ,
8. calumny, witchcraft. It was believed that 10. over, lament, Persse, 13.
some malignant influence issued from the eyes , ov, little, nice, paucus.
of envious persons, which infected the air, I live delicately.
and lenderedit noxious to those who imbibed it. ,, a sort of delicate or costly
f. aor. 1. I deceive, shoes used by women of quality.
seduce by Gal. — envy, one who is cunning in little

,
evil 2.

,
arts, 3. I
— calum- meanly cunning, . . . 7.
Theo. 5. 1 3. hinder through envy

, ,
things,

, .
, —

,,
niate—bewitch, Theo. 6. 39. immersion, Ajax, 660.

, ,- q, dye.
,
go. ,
6, a
Ionic form of
teal,

go, go,
imp. ,
querquedula, Aves, 885.
come,
go quickly, II. . 8.
e.
veils or
,, fillets,
Agam.
fir.

a dyer, Nicias.
247, saffron-coloured

9.

,
i.

?, ,, stag, 0, a title of Bacchus

q, a female devotee of Bacchus.



separate the juice by
I
pressure, I suck, milk, Heb. V"D, badal, to

,
f. I carry carry stones, pick separate, separate from as unclean, shun

up carry up, raise, extol —
carry away dis- with disgust, Equit. 224.
ease, remove, heal, Mat. 8. 1 6. carry away — /3Bs?^2s,ii£,5i,ablood-sucker,aleech,Theo.2.56'
the property of another, steal— carry news, ,, juice, gum, Gen. 2. 12.

announce carry punishment, bear, suffer, a, ov, separated from others as im-
Gal. 5. 10.— carry the burden of another, pure, abominable. — impudent, Plutus, 994,
R
— — —a

,
243
-, , , impurity, effrontery, flagiti- ,
\•, ,, aa,needle,
a Anacr. 14. dart,
244

,,, ',
ousness, Polyb. 8. 11. 8. repository of arrows, quiver.
I behave in an impudent man- 7\\,\, , bodkin— a sort offish.
, a
, ^,, ,,
ner, act detestably, Dem. 214. 24. of needles, a cer-
6, seller
,, s^ihvy-

,
f. p. tain usurer, Plutus, 175.
abhor, nauseate, stink, Plutus, 700.
I ,, a dart thrown from a

,
v\,

oi Rev. 21. 8, those who had


denied themselves with the ordure of vice

,
and idolatry.

,
\,
sling.

,)
- ov,

seemingly from the obsolete



ov, (comp. of

,
to, defilement an idol as better,more eligible, preferable, opp.

,
)\
productive of moral impurity, Luke 21. 20.

ness,
}

. ,
, nauseousness, loathsome-
3. 11. 13.
to

,

better in war, more brave or

courageous better in knoii'hdge, wiser,

,
more skilful, cleverer — better in fortune,

,
ov y abominable, filthy, Tit. I. 16. richer, more honourable, for

,ble, odious,
break wind, stink,
», to be averted as abomina-
Eum. 52.
2, Pax, 150. ,,
,the
2 Tim.
better
1. 18.
make
adverbially,

,-
better, reform.
better,

,
I

,,
f.

immoveable
,
— firm,
ov, firm, so as not to be moved,
so as not to disappoint,

-, yi, ov,
amelioration, reformation.
superlative of Dor.

, the best, most excellent,

,
sure, constant, faithful, A. 1.9. 17.

,
firm,
durable, .
so as not to change, lasting, 3.

,
. the best, the most happy life, oi /3-

,
^,,
2. 11.

,,
— firm, so as not to be refuted, certain,
true, valid, steady, unerring, Antig. 1084.
or adv. firmly, steadfastly.
) ,
the rich, the noble, opp. to

.
most perfect or accomplished,
or
to become
4. 8. 6.

,
,,,
more sure or lasting,
,
2. 1. 5.
firmness, stability, surety.
.
form, the handsomest.
, \,(sc. the best in
my best

,
, ,,
20. —
, —,
, ,
,
f. confirm ratify,

,
I
entertain firm hope, Polyb.
^confirmation, Heb. 6. 16.

, one who confirms, voucher.
, adj. Dor. not ad- \,
Mark
3.
16.
31. 3.
friend,
well as possible,
sir, Theo. 5. 76.

boys play with, Nub. 1461.


,
in the best

,
manner, as
you, good

a top which

, ,
mitted into the inside of a temple, uniti-
ated, profane, Theo. 3. 51. as a top, Vesp.
,,
520. 1
f. I turn, whirl

,

,
a grove not consecrated, and therefore ac- depth, profundity deep ca-
', —
cessible to all.
, Luc. 1. 537. verns, Od. a. 53. deep recesses of a wood,

,
&,
6.

,. ,
f. I pollute a temple, Acts 24.
profane the sabbath, Mark 12. 5.

, ,
. 316. the depth of the sea,
the deep sea, Od. . 780.
, ,», ,
, , , ,
profanation, pollution. or a great pit, a

,
jj,

, yi,

part. pass, of
adv. advisedly, see
on, Ion. for perf.
celebrated, Herod. 3. 37.
cavern, Heb.

,
m*D,
a city of Phrygia.
vj,

a, ov, of Berecys, Berecynthian.


II. 0. 14.
,-
i^QiblO, lord of flies, the name ,
q, the name of several noble

,, ,
of an idol among the Ecronites, 4 Reg. 1.
2. The Hebrews availing themselves of the
similarity

-
betweena fly, and bo?,
dung, by way of contempt, changed the
former for the latter hence we read

\, , ,
Luke 11. 15, the lord of dung.
worthless, byb'S, wicked.
:
women, and especially the wife of Ptole-
maeus Lagus hence
shoes worn by Berenice.

Dor.
,
— a sort of

oi, fools, Equit. 632, the gods

who preside over folly.


\, , 6, a palace, court, II. a. 591.

cctoc, to, a step, pace—


,, , or

-
6, bread, so called by the Phry-

, ,
'

spot to set the foot upon, the smallest spot,

",, , , ,
-,
gians, but its origin seems to be the Heb.
JQ, beg, the origin also of
,
Herod. 2.2.
, one who receives bread
from the moon, an old dotard, Nubes, 497.
, -
Acts 7. 5.— mission, direction, S. Elect.
164. —tribunal, throne, pulpit,
occupying a court of justice, pre-
siding in it, Luc. 2. 50.

, ,
, I measure by steps,
or
, so called from having slain Bellerus, a
tyrant of Corinth, II. . 155.
, measured out into miles, Polyb.
I cough— ,, a cough. -,, iq,
3. n9. 8.

,, ?,. ,
any thing thrown.
an arrow, dart, shaft javelin, stone
thunderbolt, Herod. 4. 79.

,
within the reach of an arrow, within shot,
opp. to ,

. 4. 3. 16.
,, ,
6, a precious stone of a faint

green resembling the emerald, a beryl.


, a thicket, brushwood, copse
woodlands containing rich pasture, II. .
588. Hence the Fr. bois, and our bush—
—— — — — — —a

,
,,
245
,
,
BAA 246

,
,
woody, Hes. . 389.

I. 1135.
,
,
sv, abounding with thickets,

a fine dancer, Od. B. 250.


, the Pyrrhic dance, Apoll.

,
,.
life,

life,

,
,, ,
tiful,
•.
Long. §
,
1 .

Philoct. 1191.
2. 8.
7.
— mode of
adj. food-yielding earth,

supporting
.
living-

life, scil.
—rank of
boun-

eether,
Ion.

,
violence, force
in his strength
\,

strength, vigour
vj,

majesty, II. . 1 17.


— disinclination, opp. to
against the will, in spite of,
Nub. 570. enjoying Orph. H. 33.
I describe the manners or cha-
racters of men. the things,,
described conformably to the course of life,
life,

, , , , -, , , , ,
ItKYj. ,
the mother, A.

, powers of
7. 8. 10.
life,
—injustice, opp. to


energies, II. .
2 1 9.
Long. § 9. representations of real life.

poor,
deprived of food, destitute,
-, (Ed. C. 780.

, ,, ,
f. p. f. I
force, use force, make an effort —violate -/, , — , — ,
enslave —
overcome, overwhelm, II. -. 576. livelihood —
mode of living, life, Nem. 7. 8.
— Dem. 322. 17. age— men wealth, mer- — —
,
outrage, plunder I

, , ,
am forced, suffer violence I force myself

,
— compel — ,
into, Luke 16. 16.
attack,

force a city or passage

for

chandise, Od. 0. 455. hence booty.


f.
,
slender subsistence, Pint. 1165.
I get a livelihood,

3. 2. .

,
.
467, they would overwhelm him 12. lead a life last, flourish, Nem. 4. 11.

,
II.

-, must struggle against, Rhes. 584.


,
, q, mode of living, employment,

,
, ,
lates,

,
6, a person who compels or vio-

,
<?,
the violent, Mat. 11. 12.
subsistence, O. 6. 10.
, ov — pertaining to life,

, , , ,, ,
.~&
Od. .
236.
,
.
, one that is furious, Pyth. 1.18.
ov, violent, outrageous, rapacious,
adv. violently, through
fit

of a
for supporting

sailor,
,
life,

515.
Apoll. 2. 1007.
after the turbulent life

, ,
main force, with violence, 37. . sparing, stingy, Philip. 11.

, from I stalk, part,


y. 22. lightly tripping, Olym.
ov,
—,,
life-corrupting gold, Phocyl. 40.
imp.

, , ,,, ,
,
striding, II. f. inf.
14. 24.—
213. bounding, U.
&,, part, striding, II. 37.
37.—,
I live,lead or spend life
ence, Herod. 2. 177.

,, I derive subsist-
we

.
v. f.

,
part,

stride,
by sync,
about to mount, CEd. C. 394.
11. v.

,
809.
contr.
1
shall lead a wretched life,

,,
,
to be led
life led,
fit for living,
ov, —
.
5.
5. 4. 16.

-
, why
-
,
,
an Egyptian plant called the time for living,
papyrus, of the bark of which was made

,
paper, A. 7. 5. 8. bark parchment
book, Herod. 5. 58.
— —
,
,; ,
; why is life to be led by me,
should I live? Antig. 572.
;}, life, way of living, Acts
-
26. 4.

, ,,
,,
,,
a little book, Rev. 10. 2.
parchment, Lucill. 18.
a book, parchment, scroll, a
to be led, E. 2. 3. 19. nut

wish to live?
ov, life
by whom is life to be led, who would
xv

,
life . would ,,
, would not be led by me,
libel— a bill, certificate of divorcement, I not live,

Mat. 19. 7. a register letter, Herod. 3. — Dem. 554. 5. a life not to be
128.
, — ,,
led, a wretched life.

, ,
book, pamphlet
ro, a little pertaining to life, temporal,
n, ov,

/,
, ,\, , -
small tablet or parchment, Dem. 1283. 5. Luke 21. 34. —
private, domestic, Polyb.

/,,,, , nz, 7}, a library, bibliotheca.


,-.
13. 1. 3.

, , 7\.
,
6, a bookseller. useful for life.

, a letter-carrier —registrar ij, ov, having crooked legs, varus.


— delegate, Polyb. BAAS, or
4. 22. 2.
4, gen.
-, c.

, ov, sc. oivoc,

, made of the papyrus,

,,
s. or senseless, slug-

,, ,,
Isa. 18. 1. But thought to have been gish, stupid, lazy, inert, O. 8. 16. At. 4. 2. 40.
a Thracian wine
it is

; being
called a vine in that country, Hes. s. 589.
it is said,
gish, lazy,
, ov,
O.
,^,
8. 17..
,,
9. 1.
dull, slug-

and Dr. Maltby's note.

, , ', ., am
see f. I lazy, A. 2. 3. 7.
, ,,
, —,
6, an earthen vessel with ears, a laziness, sluggishness, cow-
jar, cask a chest offigs, Luc. 3. 320. ardice, . 2. 2. 13. p. 111."
f. naoj, I commit fornication, coeo, Att. f. -, p.
Ranse, 752.

, ,,
,
tute myself, Eccles. 228.

/^t',food,
6, a bow, arcus, II. oc. 49.

6, life
I prosti-

the means of sujiporting


subsistence— the period of human
I impede, entangle, supplant

-, ^,
to, hurt, injure, opp. to

frauded, deprived,
dered, II. r. 82.
for


c.
is

R2
gen.
Od.
, f.

injured or impaired,
I

178,
is hin-
do harm
aor.
he de-
1.
— — — — — —
248

,
247
,,,
,
508. dual,
entangled,

II.
,
Anacr. 3. aor. 1. pass,

,,,,, ,,,
. 461.
, .
II. . 39. aor. 2.

perf. pass,
II. -.

387, they were entangled and tli us retarded,


part, overtaken, supplanted, II. /.
the two horses being

they were impeded,


pass.

part, -
or membrane which
eyelids,

,
.,
,,
ov,
1. 4. 6.

the dice, E. Supp. 330.


a shot,

struck,
incloses the eye, the

wound— a

wounded, Cal.
an iron clasp put round the
shaft of a spear at certain intervals in order
cast on

3. 127.

,
, , , ,
heart, slain,

. ,, —.
scil.

660.
koctk, deprived of his

,, hurt, detri-
to brace it, U. o. 678.— a nail, peg.


,
,
a shooter of arrows, Diana.
, Dor. the bleating of
ment, injury,

,,,, ,
,, , to Thuc.
hurtful, injurious.
2. 65. a sheep the squall or shriek of a terrified
infant, Od. . 266.

2, ,
hurt in mind,infatuated, I bleat, Theo. 16. 92.
. f.

,,
mad, wretched, Septem, 731.

-— ?, . ,
a shoot from the stem, a
a,

ov,bleating— feeble, timid, see
tranquil or gently murmuring


,
,
twig, scion,

-, , , , ,
, , f.
roots, O. 19. 10.
shoot, bud, QEd.
C. 638. I blossom or flower— spring from

I

cause to sprout forth, produce, Jam. 5. 1 8.


sea, Apoll. 4. 152.
slightly,
,,,
opp. to
or , also
the herb pennyroyal, so called
adv. feebly,

,
<?, ,

, ,

offspring, Heracl. 1006.

, , -» , ,
brood of children, a flourishing family.

, , ,,
a shoot, branch,
, a shoot
a
as supposed to cause the sheep to bleat.
f.

breast of a bird, Aves, 530.


or , ,
by feeling, lust after, Lysist. 1166.
I feel the

.,

excite desire

,
Septem, 12, a large shoot Att. I squeeze honey out of

,,
of body, a vigorous, full grown body. the comb, for Pint. 6. 873.

, , , one who ,

,
injures another's 6, a pot-herb
,
fair
viler,
fame,
2 Tim.
, blasphemer.
3. 2.
a defamer, re-
^, 6, an insipid, stupid person, Nub. 997.

a, ov, full of dregs— turgid— stern

,
f. I revile, vilify God by im- or shaggy brows, II. o. 608. Theo. 24. 116.

,
puting evil or applying reproachful names

,
tloc,6, , fierce-eyed,

,,
to him—-taunt, reproach, Luke 23. 39. opp. /3Aoffy£o$£>iJj/,oi/o?,fierce-minded,J5.Supp.840.
Dem. 252. pen.
II. 36. -, .

,
to I spring up, flow, Orph. 597.

,
f.

,, ,
, , ,
. . ,,
vj, slander, obloquy, a

proachful name, Ion. 1189. infamy, blas-

, ,
phemy,
a slipper
a sort of shoes, slippers, Equit. 885.
re-


,,
f.

, ,
vered with a hide,

, ,
I reach, arrive at, Lye. 448.
ov, tail pine— verdant, II. v. 389.

,
, a piece or morsel, for
,
a shield, buckler, as being co-
II. 22. .

, , ,—,
I see look, , a thong, strap, Od. . 291.

,
f. \]/, p.

advert to, mind, beware of, Mark 8. 15. ac, scil. a hide,, U. . 842.

Acharn. 375. I see the light, live, Hecub. a, ov n> ov, pertaining
,.
,
,,
. 122.

,—, - ,,,,, , , .
311.— cast a look of desire, covet, Mat. 5. to an ox, of an

,
25. see before my eyes, behold, am in the ox-words, big, noisy words, fat
presence of, Mat. 18. 10. see luith my beef, yokes of oxen, A. 7. 5. 1.
mind, perceive, to look Mars, a cow-house,
i. e. like Mars,

, look furious,
he looks like a thief, Vesp. 095.
- ,
BO Ail, f.
Dor.
or f. 1. Hi.

I roar like an ox. I


,
,,
, ) , - ,,,
she looks somewhat mad.

,

453, looking like the nastur- fear,
tium, i. e. acrid or sour, ,shout, bawl


.
shriek, vociferate through
4. 2. 14. —
shout through joy, exult
exclaim tvith indignation call upon, in- —
,,, ,
to look more cheerfully, Lysist. 886. voke, Luke 18. 7. aor. 1. m.

, ,
for
a glance, look, Herod. 4. 5. called upon, Theo. 17. 60. -
, -, ,
(for
piercing glance, look furiously. 6 h
,
f. I cast a to be noised abroad, celebrated.
or ,
a shout, clamour.

,
,
'

,
strength.
, II. . 135, he with conscious

might darts fiery looks, burns with furious

,,. , , calculated to see, of sight, ah. 445.


,, a look, sight, aspect,Nub. 1 178.
, Dor.
lamentation, Od.

battle,
adj. loud, high-sounding voice.
,

a shout, clamour, loud
48.
tune shout in the beginning of a battle,
. —
sound of music,

brave in the onset, one

, , seen, visible, (Ed. T. 1358.

the eye-lashes,
,,
, an eye-lash
plur.
1. 4. 6.

,
the skin
who is ready to begin a battle, a character

,,
of Menelaus as being more interested than
any other in the war, II. 408.
), clamour, tumult, Od. tc. 369.
.
—— — — —— — — — —

,
249

, ,
running with shouts on
6, ), — a thunderbolt—the dropping ofimmature

,,
2 250

an enemy, impetuous, Heracl. 34. quick


to succour a friend, Orest. 1290.

\,

f. ma, I run with shouts to assist

sally forth, Luc. 1. 107.


,,
,,

),
, ,,
fruits, a stone-throw, a bow-shot,

*), . f.
snow-balls.
darting. §,
Plut. 8. 195.
shoot, pierce.I
. 283.

month
fered in the

,,
a festival at Athens of-

month of the Athenian year, answering to


our September, see Plut. 1. 57.
f. I run with shouting.
—attack an enemy — succour,
or the third

\ &, ,
,
,,,
,
,
Apoll. 4. 1318, thou
art smitten, astounded in perplexity.
6, a thing cast, a piece of dung.

, ov, of dung, Range, 297.


6, the casting of a net, Theo. 1 40. .

sally forth
a friend— defend, maintain, vindicate,
as- , within a shot, Rhes. 730.

,,
,2.—,
,
sist ), any thing cast, an arrow, dart.
make an excursion, E. 4. 8. 17. rays of light f. I cast
to support the laws, put them in a line, measure the deep with a plummet,
force — relieve, alleviate disease, Polyb. 11. Acts 27. 28.

,
25. it is necessary to succour,

must avenge, E. 6. 5. 10. c. dat.


,
6, ), one who runs to support an- ,
^, >,, ,
BOMB02,

,, ,
6, a buzz, or
humming, buzzing
adv. hurly burly.
hum of bees.
bee.

,
,
other, a helper, an ally —a defender, Nem.
, ,,, ,
f. I tinkle —
ring as a heavy body

,
7. 48. falling on the ground, II. v. 530. whiz as

11.

, ,,
.
ov, adj. running to
481, an auxiliary chariot.
aid.

, ov, quick, able, to succour, A.


,
,
an arrow in the air, murmur, resound hum
as bees, Theo. 1. 107.
), the humming of bees.
,,& -
,,—,, -
R. 1. 13. 12. the power of adv. with a hum.
succouring. ,^.. 1.610, they come up with a buzz.

, ()
, ,, , ,, ov, 6,

succour, Dem. 9. 16.
help, assistance,

a cow-herd

relief reinforce-

ment—a supply march, expedition.

one who carries away the oxen as the prize


of superiority in singing, Olym. 13. 26.
), cattle-driving rod,

Mosch.

4. 1724.
, , a bee, a gnat, Vespae, 107.
a vessel with a narrow neck, Luc. 2. 332.
,
,
6, a piper, Acharn. 866.

), the killing of oxen, Apoll.

tion for cattle, a cow-house,


, ), the slaughtering of oxen,
), a sta-

.
, ^, —
,
41 1.—

,
Ep. 1. I attend cattle, Lye. Boqx, Ion. ), ), food fodder
— ,
, ,
815.

,
drive away, plunder
], the driving away cattle, plunder, II. 671. .
flesh, Cycl. 122.
, 6, a glutton, voracious, Pax, 38.

,
,
, ,, . ,
12. 11.

,
or

Boeotians
,
6, ), a cow-herd, herdsman.

,
^,
bullock or heifer, dimin. of

, — well—
,,

>,
oi,
,
cistern,
),
Od.
,,
a young

, a ditch, trench, Mac.

,
. 26.
a province of Greece
the inhabitants of Boeotia,

,, a, ov, -
,
,
dregs,

{£)~,

,
, ,,,,
, 6, food reduced to excrement,
mud, mire, 2 Pet. 2. 22.
I stain, cover with mud.

?oc, full

,
of dregs, miry.
, muddy-minded, Pax, 752.
, a stirrer of mud, a
turbulent fellow, Equit. 309.

,, Ion. , ,,— , thenorth

,
6,

belonging to or of the Boeoti-


n, ov,

, wind, boreas, aquilo, A.

, ,',—
4. 5. 3. thenorth.
-
,, , ,
ans, Boeotian fern. adj. a
Boeotian female. Boeotian
cities I act or imitate the Boe-

otians, favour their cause, A. 3. 1.17.


,
a chief magistrate of the
, ^, , —
,
fern. adj. pertaining to the north,
north, northern,
regions, scil.
?, of the
the northern

,,
northerly winds, scil.

,
,
Thebans—
magistrate of the Boeotians
,
fr.
f. I am a chief

), the office of a chief magistrate among


the Boeotians.

, ,,
. of Boeotian manufacture,
12. 3.
,
BOS

,
,
1


, ,. f. or
5. 3.
f.

feed cattle, attend on a flock— maintain,


instruct, John 21. 15.— glut, Od. . 228.
I feed, maintain myself, am fed
it is necessary to feed, must

,
,
,5. 15.
,
,
, vulva, Luc. Ep.
deemed a dainty, Horace, Ep. 1. 15. 41.
let,

6, an onion, leek, scallion, bulb.

,
6, a small onion or leek.

), ], any thing shot or cast, E. 4.


light thrown from the sun, a ray,
sunbeam, a glance of the eye, Od. . 1 50.
9. a hog's hars- maintain.

,, , ,
,
, ), a feeding, pasture, Theo. 25. 8.
—food, II. r. 268.

.8. 1.3.
h, food, nutriment, Helen. 1347.
an animal fed, a flock,

,
brood, breed, Hipp. 1356.— a herd ofswine,
the life of brutes.
— —— —a — — I

, , , , ,
,
251 EOT 252
,, ,
, ,
cattle, pasture
places yielding food for
grounds, Thuc.

- 5. 53. flock, imp.


f. I feed cattle,
Ion. for
attend on a

), ,
— — , a thou fedst thy oxen, II. .•448.— decoy

,
ov,

,
,
,
feeder of cattle, a breeder, shepherd,
a feeder or observer of birds, an
augur, Septem, 24.
,
,
ov, pastoral, Plut.

, 1. 98.
hide by false charms, Luc. 2. 440.
I beguile myself, feed myself with
false desires,
Dor.
2. 398. Vesp. 10.
I sing a pas-

, , , ,
on the pipe, Theo.
11. 34.
ov,
-, brood, Theo.
an animal
sea monsters.
fed,

m, 7], whatever the ground yields fit ^,


toral song, play

ov,
ov, 6,a pastoral poet.
having an ox's head, Trach. 13.
5. 60.

for feeding, grass —


a herb, herbage, plant , Dor. , advice, counsel,

,
pasture, 11. v. 493. plant of
the lion, parsley, Nem. 6. 71. hence botany,
the science of plants.
ov, a part of the sea near Constan- ,
,
, ,, , ,
. 5.
E. 6. 4. 8.
5. — deliberation,
14.
— senate, council,
6. 5. 33.
with design, or with the advice, E. 6. 4. 35.
ov, 6, a first mover, planner.

,
consultation,

-
tinople called the Thracian Bosphorus; Jupiter as counsellor, Lye. 435.
another called the Cimmerian, near the f. I plan, design advise — —
entrance of the Mseotis a, ov, act as a senator, Aw. 1.1. 18.

,
of the Bosphorus. I deliberate, consult, 2. 7. 8. rec

,
,
BOTPX2, , a fruit fed or reared with
care, fruit of the vine, from a bunch
, — rod. 4.
the things decreed, resolutions, He-
1 28.

^,
,
/, , ,
,
or cluster of grapes, II. . 562.

,
,
,,
,
/,
,,
to, a little cluster.
adv. in clusters,
and
II. .
,
89.
6, hair in
deliberate,
,,
.
also
it is
the function of a senator.
necessary to consult, must
4. 5. 11.
the place ,,

,
clusters, a curl, lock, ringlet. of deliberation, senate-house, senate ad-
shaded with curls, Phcen. 1507. visers, Androm. 447. Septem, 577.

,
/,
,
,
, ,
with grapes,

,. , ov, 6
- ov,


cluster-like, Apoll. 2. 674.
,
, abounding
cluster-bearing vine.
having clustered locks.
ov, adj. fit for feed-
cree,
tions of our
,
a counsel, measure, de-
Hec. 626, fic-
own fond
wishes,
the harbour of my plans, i. e. the
person with whom I shall find a refuge,

-, , ,
,
ing cattle, grassy, Od. v. 246.
ov,

, , , ,,,,, ,
mine, from
vour, II. .
,,
,
532.
,
pasture-ground. Call. 2. 50.
ov, , a wild ox, a buffalo.
a great desire to eat, fa-
greatly, and I de-
after the execution
,,
meditated murder, Dem. 778. 19.
, 6,

n, ov,
of my plans, Med. 769.
deliberation — a plot,
a senator, E. 2. 3. 16.
of a senator, senatorial.
an oath imposed on a se-
pre-

, , , . ,, £, 6, the groin, II. . 492.— nator, Ayr. 1. 1. 18.


swelling in the groin, bubo f.— ov, decreed, Call. 5. 35.
eeff6>,Ihaveaswellingin the groin,Ran. 1313. — f. ^,
,
6, q, consisting of much earth, I will, wish, desire, . 6. 1. 18. — prefer
much, yen. in. fiovyais, un- he ever always ac-

,
big-bodied, loves, is

wieldy sluggish mass, Od. . 78. Plut. 7. customed, Polyb.


9. 40. imp.
&-
,
,, , ,
. , , ,,
196. or a great vaunter, fr. Att. for they wished, aor. 1.
, much he preferred, decreed, E. 4. 4.
,
191. from
having hair, grassy, Trach.

an ox-feaster, a great glutton.


ov,
hence volo, and our

will.
,], will,
8.

vo-

C. 1565.

, ,
ov,

,
vj, a great solemn feast, (Ed.
,
I slay an ox, offer a
costly sacrifice, Hecub. 260.

.
, the slaughtering of an ox, a solemn sa-
,
lition, design, inclination,
scheme or
ov,
ov,
plot, Ajax, 44.
a counsellor,

,
6,
Dem.

II. 651.
excessive hunger, famine,
33. pen.

^,
,
02, ,
,, .
,
,
,

^, ,
great, and
,
crifice, Olym. 5. 11.

. 6, a reaper, Theo. 10. 1.

a horse with a large head.


ov,

,.
6,

Bucephalus, a ce-
lebrated horse of Alexander.
Plut. 8. 770.

faint
f.I feel excessive hunger,
through hunger, A. 4. 5. 7.
ov, 6, the time for loosening the
oxen, the setting sun, II. w. 779.

,, horned virgin, Prom. 608.

ov,
ov, Dor.

,
ov, 6, a feeder

of cattle, a herdsman rustic, II. v. 571.
a herd, flock, Theo. 8. 39.
n> ov, pastoral, bucolic.
BOT2,

or
ov, 6, a hill, eminence, mound.

ge
— a victim, hence
means
-., ,
large,
,
,
bos.
an
,,
much.
hilly, rising.
a cow, bullock
In composition
— . — — — — — —

,,
253 A A

, 254

,— fed upon by herds


, ,
grazing herds, (Ed.

fit for feeding.
26. . to anger,

,
meek, patient, Jam.
in heart, dull, stupid, opp. to

,,
1. 19. —slow
Luke

,
log, 6, a great boy, a lubber.

,
ness, Lye. 581. Call. 6. 24.
\%, — ,,
, excessive hunger, ravenous-

. , ,, ,
24. 25.
slowly, tardily,

,
slowly.
tardiness


A. 1.8. 8.

more
adv.

, ,
yyog, and , a goad, ,

,,
slowness,
II. . 135. a hatchet, delay, tardiness, It. 11. 12. 11. . 411.

,
, ,
,
1135. fr.

ed, Trach. 13.


,
/, ox-made, large bee, Strato, 88.
ov, ox-piercing, large spit,
A. 7. 8. 8.
having the front of an ox,horn-
). -,
Androm.
2 Pet. 3. 9.

—am slow or
f.

,,
mering, Luc.
I render slow, retard, delay
tardy,

598.
sj,
1 Tim. 3. 15.
slow of tongue, stam-
Exod.

,
3. 4. 10.

,— , — ,
,.
,,, a station for oxen, stable, cow-
house, Helen. 29.
ov, turned with oxen, plowed,

, ,
f.

,
,
slow to be persuaded.
I sail slow, am detained
by contrary winds, Acts 27. 7.
, , slow-footed,
\.

,
twisted around the ox, Hecub. 66, the slow move-

,
Lye. 1438.
said of a band or collar which fastens the
neck to the yoke, Philip. 14. a goad as —
ments of my limbs.

, , ,, slow-legged Vulcan.
,
, ., , Ionic compar. of

,
serving to turn the oxen. ov, for
I slaughter, sacrifice oxen, E. more slow, more dull, II. . 226.

,
Elect. 627.

,
, Dor. , a herdsman, ,
,
,,
,
,,
,
I boil, bubble violently.
boiling, bubbling, agitation.
cow-herd adjectively in Hipp. 537.

,
breeches, brogues, braccae.

,
from with the digamma, Theo.28.

,
slaughtered oxen. 1.
, ,a
1

ov, to, the bur-reed, a plant which honour of


festival in

, ,,. ,,
the ox loves to crop, Theo. 13. 36. Diana at Brauron, an Athenian borough.
,

,
, a smiter of oxen, Apoll.4.468. adv. from Brauron, Dem.
, , butter,
,
1264. 20.
, an ,, , the arm from the elbow to

-,— ,
ox-killer. f.

,I slaughter or sacrifice an ox, II. >?. 466.

2,
,, a festival in which an ox
was killed, a great feast, Nub. 984.

^, , f.
,
, a cattle-feeder, bubulcus.

,, ,
I feed oxen, attend a herd,
the shoidder,

bracelet.
brachium
,
,
Ion. \, , short
little— short height, low, opp. to

short time,
—might, Acts 13. 17.
6,


3

,
Alcest. 8.

,,, ,, , .
/yic, ,
public sacrifices,
a herd, flock.
, a purchaser of oxen for the
Dem. 570. 7.
, large-eyed, Juno,
, a herdsman— a plowman, the
. 1. 2. 15.
,,
short distance, near, opp. to
measure, small— short words, few.
,,'.
shore

theshortest discourse,

short occasion, light
work, brief, simple,
short
a few things,


-
name of a constellation, Bootes.
>, ,, ,
-
2. 4. 34.— shallows, Herod. 2. 102.

BP ABETS,

,,
,
f. \,I drive the oxen, Hes. g. 389.
, %,, ,
an umpire, avenger, Orest. 1065.

direct,
f.

Col. 3. 15.

,
I
, the presi-
dent who adjudged the prize to the victor,

act as an umpire, preside,



decide, intercede
,,,,,,
,
,
,
Iia
something small, a small portion

. - adv. shortly, briefly,


neut. plur. shortly,

in
30.— comp.
shorter,
most
more brief— sup.

few words, in a short com-


brief, shortest.

,
dispense, Meleager, 1 1 pass. £77/ in brief, briefly,
, , decision terms of reconci- —
,
a little, by little, gradually, in

,
02, ,
,
, , ,
,,
,
,
, ^,
liation, Phoen. 453.
,
ov,

ov, 6
ov,
ov,


victory, a prize, Philip. 3. 14.

hoarse, Agath.

having gills.
\,

, a damson, Theo. 146.


,

, , hoarseness.
of a fish, Theo. 11. 54.
the reward of

69.
7.

,,
,-
a short time, in a small or mo-
derate degree, Polyb. 16. 12. 11.
6, , c.

now-minded, having less foresight, ^.4.18.


nar-

ov, adj. able to run only a short


distance, said of the hare, K. 5. 21.
ov, having short clauses, said of
a period, A, R. 3. 9. 6.

2, -,, , - ~, ),
the gills
,, the parts about the glands ,
, , using few words, con-

,,
of the throat. cise, Plut. 4. 142. •\,

or
,, c.
by transp.
s.

-uc,
use paucity of words, speak with concise-
ness. ,
, brevity of speech.
f. I

slow — slow in feet, tardy, A0. 2. 5.— slow f. I shorten, abbreviate.


,
255

,,.
,,
— —

, narrow passage, Pint.


I

having a short iron spike,


2. S29.

. 384. — am laden ivith glort/,.


,
majestic, exalted, Nem. 3.
— —

,.
,
70.
e.
——
256
rendered

Nem.

, ,
,
lightly armed, 3. 79. a loud trumpet, a vio-
,
, shortness of syllables, lent contention, II. 385. imp. . for

,-,
conciseness of speech, Call. Ep. 13. they were heavy with, full of, Od. /.

,;,
,
^,,,
ov,

ov,
having a narrow month.
, shortness,
having small leaves, #.332.
short dtiration,Plut. 6.406.
. 5. 32.

,
,,,
219. aor. 1.
Nem.

, ,
8. 31.
,
,,,.
he loaded, enriched,

a terrific fiend,
I gnash my
Hecate.
teeth with

,
f. |iw, I roar as thunder, Heb. p~)^, anger, am enraged, 4. 5. 5. Equit. 851.
rattle as arms, ring, . 420. —crack, , power, such as that of

,, ,
II. II. ej, terrific

, —,,

,
£.838. roar as atorrent,<p.9. rumble,<p.387. magic, Apoll. 4. 1677.
— ^,, , 6, , menace,
intimidation.
,,
,,
the forepart of the head, sinciput, II. £.568. or the throat— the
trachea or wind-pipe— jaws, Theogn. 1095.

, ,, ,
indecl. the croaking of frogs.
— 7 ,
sea —
f. I roar as the ivind
express in loud notes, Bacch. 162.—
,
rage as the —
, 0 > ov, of the throat.
the gristles of the rough artery con- —

, ,,
neigh, snort, raging in arms cavities of the lungs.

,
,h.fremo.

,
,
I resound, roar, Nem. 11.8.

, pride, pomp, arrogance.


am proud,overbearing.
,
,
6, from a roar, crash of
thunder— crackling of a flame bellowing,
Hipp. 1 202. o>j, roaring,

-
,
fttos, a title of Bacchus, Bac-

,, Nubes, 361, he is
stately or consequential in his walks
ter with supercilious air, Luc. 1. 170.

br'ith, painted.
,
mut-

6, the Britons, from the Welsh

Hence Oppian gives them


^,,

,
chanalian or noisy mirth.
rave under the influence of Bacchus.

,
f. ,,
,
, thunder, the roar or a clap
of thunder, Od. . 121. a power of elo- —
roar,

I roar —hum, buzz, II. or. 642.

,
, , -,
the epithet
ed backs

,
ceo;, ,
having parti-colour-
tloc, Britain.
a painted image, seemingly
from the Celtic brith a statue. —
quence which astounds or electrifies.

scil. Jupiter.
,
,
of thunder the thunderer,

I thunder, II. . 133.




,,
f. elec-
,
so;,

the fetus yet in the womb, an
embryo a babe boy, Anacr. 3. — ,,
trify with flashes of eloquence.—
the roar of thunder, Prom. 992.

, ,,,
/, , an infant. , an in- ,
darting forth thunder

, , , , ,. , §
fanticide. and lightning, Nubes, 264.
f. p. aor. 1. pass. BPOT02, ov, a man a mortal, opp. to —
mf&ftfonvi p. I cause to rain, pour or — mortals, the source of
rain, wet, moisten, Luke 7. 44. corruption in man, flesh and blood, gore, II.
Olvm.
92, having his 6. r,. 425.

, —

,
body bedewed with the rays of violets, i.e. ov, of mor-

, ,
sprinkled with the radiant dews which fell tals — mortal,perishable incidental to —

, ,,,
from the violets. mortals, Andr. 1256. opp. to
,, raining, wetting, . 5. 9. blood-stained, 11. . 480.

,
BPI, an inseparable

, ,
particle increasing the
sense of a word, very, greatly.
ov, strong, heavy, II. . 413. —
a murderer consisting of a
slain mortal, human sacrifice, Iphig. T.384.
f. ,
I slay a mortal, I mur-

/,
,

,
, I render strong, extol, Hes.
, a mighty warrior
a giant, Briareus.
. 447.
(, ,) 7\, ,
der, Eum. 424.

cide,
6, a man-destroyer, a homi-

an epithet of Mars, II. . 518.

,tive,
ber,

2,
,
,
. ,
,
,
,
-.
-,
f.

compare

,
,-
shouting Mars,

, ,—,/,
.
«, I dream,
II. .
am
223. with

, one who shouts aloud, loudly


II. v.

heavy, ponderous,Il.£. 746.


yc, , weight, gra-
521.
sluggish or inac-
. 18.— I slum-

vot,
-oc,

vigilant/zmVs,

f. ,
,,
,
adj. men-observing, i. e. no-
ticing the actions of men to punish them,
Eum. 503.
men-hating, Prom. 798.
illuminating men,
with blood,
I stain
blood-stained arms, Od. 41. .
. 597.

vity

,,

a load, burden. II. ?. 839.
,
a stag with heavy horns.
p. m. I am heavy, , , , ,
,,
,
,a
rain, wet, Matth. 7. 25.
throat, gullet, Theo. 3. 54.
, a cord, ncose, rope,

,
f.


laden withfruits, d. r. 1 1 2. make a strong
impression, prevail, II.
surpass, Ajax, 130.
346. 359. excel

am overwhelmed, II.
. — ^,
snare, 1 Cor. 7.
, , a sort of
I tipple, sip,
25. the throat, Long. 10.2.
locust, Lev. 11. 22.
Equit. 1 1 23.
— — — — — —
— —

,!57

,—, , .
I plunge, hence aki, plunged do tobacco. Theophrastus (Hist, plant. 4.
258

from

,
in the sea, Philip. 77. 9.) expressly says that they drank this juice.
f. I tear with the 02, , 6, bottom deep sea— the deep —
— gnash —
&,
teeth, bite, chew,
the teeth, Acts 7. 54.
gnaw, Lysist. 301.
II. . 393,

causing the teeth to gnash through pain—


I greedily devour, Cyci. 371. I , ,,
,
depth, Theo. 11. 62.

H. 23.


oi/,be!ong-
ingto the deep dwellingin the t!eep,Orph.
^,
having dived into the
deep deep net inextricable.
, —
-
,, ,
,
am racked with pain.

$,
, ,, , , ,,,
,
, gnashing of'the teeth, extreme
anguish or pain, Mat. 8. 1 2.
adv. with gnashing of the
teeth, with a roar, Apoll. 3. 1372.
a, ov, roaring, Prom. 1081.
f.

I am

called Constantinople—
,,
the inhabitants of Byzantium.
, Od.
I plunge, cause to sink
plunged, I sink, Luke 5. 7.

,,
the city of Byzantium, now
, oi,

.
adj. swelling, x. 20.
f. I roar as a bull, growl -, , a trumpet, buccina.
— BTP2A, , a

,
,
as a tiger

,,a
'4> W>

,,,
groan deeply, Ajax, 322.

roar,

f.
'h,

),
growl— a deep
roaring rage, Paul. Sil. 47.
I spring up as luater, stream,

groan.
ij,

made of skin or of
n, ov,
29.—-
, a leather thong, a whip or
scourge.

.
kt
skin, hide,

the tanner eagle,•


leather.

a ravenous

,

gush spring forth as buds, bud, sprout,

blossom, teem cause to spring transitively,
produce, emit, Jam. 3. 11. hence brew. ,eagle ; a name given to Cleon, who was a
tanner, Equit. 197.

-, , -,
, , a tanner, Acts 9. 43.

,
,
,
This is the Heb, *")0, a well, which also gave
rise to
ground,

0, ,
,,
,,
,,
I spout or burst out from the

M. Supp. 891.— abound exult.


sea-weed, Theo. 21.7.
mossy, fungous, Plut. 8. 541.
ale or beer, called also
{*,

. stretched,
f.

ner, Plutus, 1 67.


I dress leather, am a tan-

er of leather, a tanner,
/\,
drums made of stretched
,
, a dress-


skins, i. e. sound-
, ,
Nub. 581.
ov, skin-
timbrels or

,--
part. ),
f.

having eaten of, Gd. 403.


I eat, devour, perf.
,
', , .
ing,Helen. 1363. rattling,
Bacch. 124, the hide-stretched orb, i.e.
.

,
Od. .
35.
,
having fed upon, 11.

203.—,
imp.
96.
paulo-post fut. shall be eaten, consumed,

, , ., , , ,
, I devour,
.

I eat, Call. 1. 49.


,
..
the sounding timbrel,
, flax of the finest sort raised in
Ea;vpt,cotton
ph.
—fine linen, Luke 16.19. Heb.

, —
,,
,

, ,
y\, ov, fine linen, Rev. 18. 16.

,,
,
,
Rom.
a thing eaten, food, nourishment, eating,
14. 15.
, 6,

,
4. 7. 9.
carrion, the food of birds.
eating, the sharing of food,
BT2202,
Herod. 3.
,
23. hence
6, for

adv. from the deep,


plan deep counsel's,
bottomless
80.
I
a bottom, deep,

..

,, , , ,
f.

meat, John 6. 27.— the corrosion or waste meditate in secret, Od. . 66. — conceal in

, , ,
made by a worm, Mat. 6. 20. my breast schemes of revenge, Luc. 3. 1 53.
.. ,
,
,
eatable,

, ,
ri,

Luke
ov, and
24. 21.
,
that which is eaten, food, Az-.2.1.1.

- -,
fit for eating,
or
— f. ,
meditating deep revenge.
p.
— stop up
pass,

, §,
n, od, disposed to eat, voracious. I cram, Od. . 134.
fill, in conse-

,.,
|

'
, an eater, devourer, Eum. quence offilling, close, He-
806. rod. 6. 125, he had his mouth crammed.

,

a corruption seemingly having shut her up in
for I roar, bray, Vespae, 616. the chamber, Alcest. 1058. see Maltby.
, , an Egyptian plant, of which ,,&. —
I BTBA02,
the bark was called

,
and wrought
, ,
hence

, ,,
fertim,
cram full in a body, con-
Thuc. 4. 8.

,,
into paper or ropes, JE. Supp. 768. — paper,
^, , ,— , a herdsman, Theo. 10.33.

,
thus
Egypt.
from
differs a book — a

,a
of t
city

,,
glebe, a clod.
6, Heb. HOD, any high place to
,

, , &,
rus,
wrought
or
n, ov, made of the
little
bybl us or papy-
tackle of a ship
of the byblus, Od. 390.
wine of Byblus, the city where it
was made, or rather wine made of the juice
of that plant, which being nutritious was
book,

.
scroll.

,,,
sacrifice upon, a high altar, altar.


q, an ascent steps called
a small altar, Herod. 2. 1 25.
or a, ov, of the altar, An-
tig. 1309.— at the altar, M. Supp. 93.
pieces of meat from the altar,

-
chewed by the Egyptians as some men now ,', ,
Ion. 52.
o,one who lies in wait for what
S
—— — — — — — —

,, , ,
.

259

, , ,
A

,
26Q

, ,
he can get from the a parasite, buf-
altar, ,
a young lamb, a suckling,

, , , ,
6,
foon adjectively, scurrilous, Nub. 909. Od. . 336. sucking pigs

^, ,
am scurrilous, Nub. 936.
I act thebuffoon,

, ,
of a babe, infantine heart, Simonid. 7.
jj, ou —
^, , su — ya-

, ,
,
and or of milk,
, buffoonery, scurrility, Equit. 902. —
milky having the colour of milk.

, ,
for I help, Meleag. 19. ov, 6, a drinker of milk, a
Bargea,

,
mat, Dor.
f.

'/, ,
for
I call

6,
to —bawl, Theo. 5. 64.
a herdsman, Theo. 1.80.
aor. 1. of to
stranger to the artificial modes of life, a
rustic, Herod. 1.216. irtuo, Eur. Elect.] 69.

,,
, milk-bearing, a nurse.

,
, , .
,
call, invoke, Herod. 1. 146. f. I give suck, Plut. 8. 538.

,, Dor. an ox
6, a sea-calf, from the Doric
for
, 10. 34.
,
I am filled with milk, Plut.

, , ,
hence phoca. see Anthol. s. 53.

, ,,
a. 155. from
-—
rh ou, men-feeding,

,
auvjp.
populous, II.

Minor
,,
the milky way, galaxy.
6,

Gallo-graecia, a part of Asia


Galatians ,

, , ,
6, a shepherd. rh ou, of Galatia, pertaining to the
Galatians.
, , contr. , a Theo. cat,

. 15. 28. — weasel; hencego/<?«, a helmet, as

,,
,
, .
A, Dor. for
ya, Dor. for
jjg,
,
indeed, at
earth. ,
otv a large net as
least.
made of the skinof this animal.

,
,', cage for weasels, a mouse-trap.

,
,
615.
, 6,

,
a lamprey, a glutton, Luc. 1.

,,
collecting every thing in it, Agam. 369. resembling the lamprey or weasel.
from the Arab. yQj gama to collect.
,
, a gangrene, cancer moral
infection, Plut. 6. 240. 2 Tim. 2. 1 7.
, a king's treasure, a royal cabi-
%,
— stellio,
— ,
mild, cheerful
, , a starry lizard — evet, newt,
Nub. 73.

)-
1

, a tranquil state a?,


adv. gaily.

, ,,
net. a place where of the sea (and thus it differs from a tran-

.money, vases, and other valuable things are


preserved —
a treasury, John 3. 20. - (for ,
quil state of the air,
and
^), this for
a calm, '

, ,
,, ,,
a keeper of the treasury.
Dor. , ,,)
jj, (that
'^, Od.

,
sea; or
. 319, they will row the calm
ye^«!/*7z/, they will urge the
oars along the tranquil sea— serenity, tran-

,which produces
earth, opp. to
all things,

from
earth, opp. to -
the quillity, A. 5. 7. 5

, — ou, tran- — ^,,

,
when made
land,
to
shore— ground
produce,
a country, region, the habitable world-
soil any thing made of earth, a mas? of
earth, a dead body, II. . 5A.
i.

7 ainku, from
e.


— the earth
ivhen cultivated,

, ,
quil, serene, gentle, mild, Iphig.T. 345.
Dor.
tranquillity of mind, Iph. A. 546.

,,
calm, am
f. —
serene or tranquil.
aaua,
, calmness, ,
f. , I become

- , ,
, , , a husband's
the earth or ground.
Ion. ',pertaining to the
ou, brother's wife, II. . 1 22. Heb. *? 2.
sister, a

,
», ,
, ,
,
,
earth, of-the earth, earthy,
of earth, Od. vj. 324.
son

earth-born, Apoll. 3. 1 185.


yai /,
the title of Neptune, or the sea as surround-

,, . ,,
,,
, , a priest of Cybele,
, an union between a male and
6,
female, marriage — marriage-feast—
entertainments, Lukel 2. 36.— an apartment
or hall in which a feast is celebrated, Mat.
gallus.

,
ing the land, land-holder. 22. 10. Arab, y/20, gama, to unite.

,
, ,
,
ou, of the earth, terrestrial.
land wind, blowing from the land.
,
ave-

earthy, low places, Polyb. 2.


f.

aor. 1.
or by sync, obs.
I unite in marriage,
marry, wed. The active form is generally

15. 8.

,\>&.,
, ,,
II.

—the
,
a. 405. ,
,
obs.
,, ,
6, a spear, javelin, Polyb.
lam high, exult,

milk curd ,
6. 39.
Heb.niO,


used of the male, qui ducit uxorem ; but
the female, quae nubit, is also said to marry,
1 Cor. 7. 28.

has married, f.
a man who

said generally of the female. I give myself

1
Nem.
birds,
, ,, ,
Cor.
simplest
3.
3.
2.
135.
abundance or

of the gospel,
principles
the cream of poetic genius,
the milk of
rarity.
in marriage, am married
11. ;. 394.

of the male,

Mat.
give in marriage,
receive in marriage, marry, said
5. 32.
I give^in

marriage, 1 Cor.
— — —— — —— —— —— — — —— —

, ,
.

261 262

, ,)
7. 38.
in marriage, am wedded, Mark 12.
ov, 6, one who is become
I am given
25.
related
15. 17, they

fact —
, have indeed thought
Rom. 7. 2, the wife is in
indeed or assuredly bound by the
is

, —
fit.

"
,
by marriage, (for a son-in-law law to her husband while living, ov
also a brother- or father-in-law, Hipp. 63 1 Rom. 4. 13,

, ,
— a husband, Theo. 129.
,, , ,—a
ov, 6,

O.
15.
a married man, a husband.
wife, II. 4. 6. 2.
in fact the
not by the law.
promise was made to Abraham

and what hath he done ?


evil in fact
', Mat.

,
3. 10. 27, 23,
, ov a, ov, pertaining to

,
Acharn. 594, but who in

, ,
marriage,nuptial,conjugal,hymeneal,Mosch. fact are you ? who then are you ?
2. 120. Bion, 1. 88. marriage From signifying in fact, came to express
rites, wedding. the cause of some circumstance preceding
,
,
,, ,
adv. with marriage pomp, ...3.
a, ov, nuptial, Bion. 1. 88.— pre-
siding over marriage.
riage portion.
rites, Dem. 12. 12.
or
, mar-
,,
marriage

a land-
,
, 6,
it— for, because, therefore, just as
in fact, means in Latin (ergo) therefore.
But it is to be remarked, that the sentence
in such cases is very often elliptical. " Do
you not know, brethren, for I speak
to them that know the law," Rom. 7. 1.
()

,
.
,
holder, a native citizen, opp. to a stranger

ijg, vj, or


, -
or slave, Herod. 7. 155. M. Supp. 621.

a jaw
the jaws of a lion,U. v. 200. the mouth
of a horse, r. 390. the talons of a bird

,

Here

the law.
123,
refers to a clause understood
" Do you not know, brethren" I put this
question because I speak to them who know

"Thou, most avaritious,


Atrides, art
and thy avarice has prompted thee to make
}>

, II. .

02,
the cheek, hence to champ.

,,
ov, adj. crooked. -, an impracticable request, for how shall the
Greeks give thee a reward?" Sometimes,

-
having crooked talons, rapacious, in the rapidity of association, the writer
Prom. 488. gives his reason for a thing which he has
02, ,
,
joy, gladness, not yet expressed ; and the force of
, so$,

the sweets or delight of the bee, i. e. to be observed only by new modelling the
is

,,
,
,
honey, the exhilarating juice
of the grapes, Ranse, 1355.

, - ?v, gladsome, JR. Supp. 1026.


sentence, see II. . 328. Sometimes
fers to a circumstance preceding at some
distance.
re-

" And they said to themselves,

,
,,
, , ,-
f.
I am bright.
shining arms, Meleag. 115. 11.^.265.
— I ren-
for Who will roll away the stone from the
mouth of the monument ? for (yet^)it was
very large," Mark 16. 4. The writer giving

,
f.

, , ,
der joyful, make glad, exhilarate

. —
I am elevated

, —),,,,
.
rejoice, ex-
way to the impulse of his ideas, interposes
the clause, "and having lifted up their eyes,

, ,
ult, Iphig. T. 1239. 43. they saw that the stone was rolled away."

, -
, , ov, , tickling,
.,
, , ,
to,a thing that causes delight, gift, titillation, Thesm. 140.
blessing, Paul. Sil. 74. joy, exultation I tickle, soothe, flatter, Anacr. 181.

, , I am tickled, soothed, Luc. 3.


lustre, decoration, Plut. 7. 155; 6. 176.

,
, ,
, ,
672. yyj,

,
for -
sc, £oc, fallen to the ground, Phoen.
-.
tiller of the ground.

-,
or 6, a ,
152.

f. , I
ov, ,
6,

wash the throat, gargle.


gargling.
ov, o, tickling.
the throat.

,(a conjunction) in fact, indeed, truly,

-,
then— for, because, wherefore.
The real signification of this particle is sup-
plied only by its origin, which is the Persian
belly

-, ,,,,
ov,
gen.
— womb — bosom —appetite, .2.1.2.
a little belly,
big-bellied, Plut. 560.
or

Nubes, 391.
ij, the

,deed
-, ,
kar-dan, to do, and which is the parent also

,<?,-,
-,
of the Latin cur, and the French car. Hence
the primary notion of
deed, truly, then.

,
John
is, in fact, in-

4. 44,
—Jesus himself bore testimony,
and

,
}, ,
in fact — in- 452. —
well fed.
the belly of a vessel, II. . 348.
or
man, a glutton, Aves, 1 604.
, a big-bellied

1 indulge, smite the belly, Equit.

I have my belly fed, am


the over filling the

, -,
Luke 1 2.58, belly, gormandizing, Luc. 3. 26.
while you are indeed going with your ad- ov, 6, eager for the belly, Olym.
versary to the judge,
in fact, to Moses he says, or to Moses in-
deed he says, Rom. 9. 5. 1 , ,
1. 82.

ov,
I
,
voraciousness.
cut the ground, plow, Lye. 1391.
6, a milk-pail, Herod. 6. 119,

S2
—— — — — —— — —

, ,
, ,
,, , A
?G3 264

,
02,
, 6, a ship of burden, a transport
or merchant ship, Herod. 6. 1 7.
ov, of a merchant ship,
mercantile goods, A. 5. 8. 1.
ov, proud, Long. 7. 2.
—petulant, Theo.
insolent —
/, ,702.
ov,

indecl.
a cry, vociferation.
«,
audible, bawling
with a louder voice, Luc.

the vale of
neighbourhood of Jerusalem, where the ido-
Hinnom in the
2.

^
11. 21. ro pride,

,, ,
wantonness.

^,
latrous Jews sacrificed children to Moloch

,
,.,
prance,

,,,

. 10. 16.
,ij,

.
pride, a
I

Dem. 308. 6.
haughty air.
exult, pride myself,
— a place of punishment after death, sup-
posed to resemble gehenna, hell, hades,
Mat. 5. 22.
, ,
-,
Icause to prance,render proud. 6, a plowman,

I pride myself, prance, Is^. 2. 15. ,


, one who has a portion of the

,, am
, , ,
,
pride, exultation.
sprung, I am, p. m. .,.-
land, a colonist, Apoll. 1452.
, a wheel-barrow to carry earth.
4.

,',
I

,,
, ,,,
or

,
they are, exist, Od. e. 35. inf. ov, also the
to beborn,to have sprung, —
eaves of a roof the chapiter of a pillar
Olym. 9. 164. part, sprung, the coping of a wall a ridge of stone or—
II. /. 456. (a new verb from the turf on the top of a house a battlement, —
,
perfect ysyxKot) inf.
sprung, Olym. 6. S3.

of the same origin with ,


, ,,
,
to have

indeed, even, at least. This particle is


xev or ; and ,
turret, Orest. 1571.

coping, &c.
I form a
coping, am covered or protected with a

a neighbour adjectively,
.
,-
its sole use is to mark opposition or em- neighbouring, at hand, 2. 2. 12.
phasis, xai ys sin rove;

, I am in the neighbourhood,

,
Acts 2.
18, and even upon my servants. ovfi /
-
f.

situated near, I border upon, IJo. 1. 8.

,. ye, ovle
2. 2. 8, ,
laughter even to your friends, nor to
you willingly neither afford
, I
, , neighbourhood.
am
he who
neighbourhood,
in the
near, a neighbour, Dem.
f.

,
is

strangers, xat ye 1 Cor. 1272. 19.


4. 8, and I wish indeed you were kings,
/,
a part,
ye, if not the whole, at least
, II. . 120, this
,,,,^,
ysiToaC'JOc, y,

, ,
some
,.
,
heart,
«^neighbouring, Antip.Sid.103.
Dor. for
Olym.
cheerful, glad-
5. 5.
at least of you see, i. e. though the ma-
all
lignant and envious eyes of Caichas alone
see that I am the cause of the pestilence,
all of you can see this, namely, that my
prize goes elsewhere. Achilles expected

,
,
I

,, ,
--
f. for
laugh, smile, rejoice. 6tx
105,
Dor. for
yshmt, as or how they laugh, Theo. 1. 90.
part,

,
laughing, 1. 95. 36. for
.

that Agamemnon would have accepted his


challenge to come and take away any thing
, , ,laughing, Od. . 40. imp.

, they laughed, Od. v. 347.


for

,
that belonged to him on board his ship, rejoicing, Od. v. 390. f.

verse 300. This would have given him joy, I laugh, aor. 1. for laugh-

/' ,
but he sent his heralds ; and it is said that
when Achilles saw them, he did not rejoice,
behold on seeing
them indeed Achilles did not rejoice, 330.
which means that he would have rejoiced , ,,,
ed, smiled, shone around, II.

., ,
20. 15.

oi,
362. Dor.
he scornfully derided me, Theo.

laughing, laughable.
wrinkles caused by smiling.
.

had he seen Agamemnon, ,


,
is generally a laugh, smile, giggle, xv-

,
annexed to other words, but mostly to o, Prom. 90, un-

,,,
, , ,,
and with these, as doubt-
less in ether instances, it is an expletive.
from I make known, by trans.
and with the Ionic augment,
numbered smile of waves,
waves that smile,
unnumbered
i.e.
in allusion to their glossy
appearance, or unnumbered giggling waves,
in reference to their sound.

,,,, , , , ,
-,
I cause my voice to become known, i. e. I to be laughed at, Od. 3. 307.

-, ,
speak aloud, am heard, imperat. yiyaus,
call,Orest. 1220. declare. Prom. 193. inf.
jj, ov,
mirth, Call. 4. 324.
ov, , one who laughs at another, a

), , ,
to be heard, II. 6. 223, mocker, (Ed. T. 1 435.

, ,
plup.
%. 34. ,
p. m. yeyovjx, part, heard, . 227.
he called aloud, exclaimed,
imp.
diculous, contemptible, opp. to
h amorous, sportive,
ov, c.

.
s. ri-

.-
I 2. 3. 1.

. 370.— -
E, Elect. 809.
,
cried to, loudly invoked,
part.
Od.
loudly uttering,
adv. in a way that excites laughter, ridicu-
lously being ridiculous, ri-
diculously situated, hence —
— —— —— — — —— ——

,
25

,,-,
,), , ,
,
mock, deride.
mockery.—
I
a scoffer.
I

,
, , things usually
ordinary events, 1.6. 19. .
come
- 2G6
to pass,

. ,
I compose ludicrous verses.
jj,laughingfrom complaisance
children which are produced
and still exist or are in being, 8. 6. 7. sv

, ,
to another, e. affecting to laugh as a flat-

, , ,
i. in the passing
terer, Anthol. 2. 389. days, in that and the next day, 5. 4. 21. .

,,,
derision
stock,
, —
, , ,

things are laughter,

,
or

,
, laughter

99.

6,
,
an object of derision, a laughing-
Od. . Dem.
i.
47.
e. contemptible.
one who excites laughter,
all
hence gigno.

gin —
,
,
the thing born, race
leaves, II. . 146.
6, the founder of a family.
also
race of leaves,

race of men, human race,

yc,

, birth, ori-

, ,
a buffoon, 2. 1. 11. I act the family, breed a race going before, ances-
buffoon, cause laughter by mimickry, Asr. tors - a race coming after, posterity the —
3. 9. 9. , buffoonery, , present race, generation, age in

,
, employment or character.

,
mimickry. race,

,
I am full, am laden with, Mat. 23. 25: Ion. f. \, I trace a
-
, 7\,
I fill, load a ship, Dem. 569. 4. person s birth or parentage, Herod. 2. 91.

, , ,,
,
I load for myself, am laden,910. 8.
a mess, feast, Agam. 1232.
I am born or made, am, become,
— give a man's pedigree
am registered as born of a certain family
derive my origin, Heb. 7. 6.—
I

, ,
, ,,.§ ,, -
turn out, happen, p. m. came, or
sprang into being, was made, John 1. 2.
.
, jj, a register of one's birth, genealogy.
,
birth —
breed, II. £.270.
y,

,
perf. part, become, being, 1. 2. the birth-place of silver, silver-

,
13.

, ,
aor. 2. m.
he became, was, . 35.
for
for .
,

-
mine, II. 857. .
, ov, at the birth, natal.

,
became, was rendered, . 466.

, , ,
a, ov, pertaining to birth native
ior rose up, befel, Od.A.207. — presiding over birth, Olym. 13. 148.
for thou art born, didst spring used substantively, one who gives birth to
,
,
, ,,
Od.
...

, -,
up, II. . 897. imper.
. 491. subj.

,
optat. ), ,\>.
which I pray may never
thou,

-
another, a parent, author.
, natal rites, the anniversary of one's
birth.
,

, ,, ,^ ,
, , ,
happen, Septem,


5.
the reason
which really happened, the true reason, the
inf.
scil.

.
part, Philoct. 458.
offspring,
, beard, Call. 26.
, , beard,

chin, Od. .

76.
3.
1

,
, , , ,,, ,
truth, iEschin. c, Ctes. §

transitively,
aor.
opp. to
1.
she produced, brought
thee forth, II. a. 280. Even the second aorist
is sometimes used transitively, as

he produced for himself, took up,


for
m.
f.

I have a beard, am grown to

manhood, Od. . 175. Theo. 14. 28.


,
, bearded, Luc.3.24.Call.3.90.
,
Dor.

production, origin, 11. |. 201.


the creation of the world —

, , ,, , ,
genesis, i. e.
laid hold of, II. . 476. growth of plants, formation,
), f. fut. m. will come to Jam. 1. 24, the image of his
pass, Cor. 15. 54. aor. 1. pass,
1 form, the wheel of his
imperat. let it be done, be it to being, the course of his life, 3. 6.

, ,,, ,,, ,
thee, Mat. 15.28.part.ygy>5^^ being done,

,
Heb. 4. 3. aor. 1. indie. we pro-
duced or behaved ourselves, or simply we
were, 1 Thess. 2. 5. perf. pass,
a, ov, pertaining to birth, natal

Mat. 14.6.
,
,
birth rites, birth-day feast,

birth, 11. . 535.


,
,

,
,
part,

,,, ,, ,,, ,, ,
1 have been made, am become, or passed,
that which took place,
the event which ensued, 11. 5. 3. 11. The

,,
same
,
in sense with 5. 4. 9. - founder.
6, Dor.

son, progeny, (Ed. 478.



a father.
6, a

, a mother.
.
parent,
,
a

, jj, the goddess of birth, Ve-


past events, 1. 6. 19. p. 84.
I am made, am nus, Nub. 52.
, a pick-axe, Antig. 255.

,
produced— I spring up, happen, take place,
,
inf.

, ,
born, opp. to

, , ,
1.15. imperat. ^, , -
to come into being, to be
to perish, Aw.
be not, 2 Cor.
1.

6.
see Dem.
,
those born of the same tribe.
ol,

1319.27.
ov, c. pertaining to the
14. part,


,
son, scil.
,
ed, the event,

-
that which happen-
3. 3. 30. .
product, gain
that which usually or justly befals a per-
his just portion, Dem.261 .1.

whole kind, general, from
the genitive case.
f. p. I cause to be
born, produce, beget, Iphig. A. 1065.
267
/,

,
,
, , ,,
, ,

was born.
I

produced,
created, destined by birth, 2 Pet. 2. 1 2. 6
— —a

nators,
—— —

^, ,,
age, a sage, an old man. oi
an old man.
— —
268
the se-

,
ywvwuc, he who has produced, a father. © a little old fellow, Nub. 788.

, ,
ysvuYi()stg,hethat is
Dor. for
produced, offspring, son.
thou shalt pro-
ysQouTiot, old men, A. 6. 3. 13.
,
6, an instructor, a guide of

, ,,
duce, Iphig. A. 1065. old men. I teach, guide an

,
the parts of trees which produce. old man, instruct anew, Equit. 1096. CEd.
m, a race, progeny, Hecub. 1 98. C. 361. new modelling his

,, ,
ov, c. s. brave, gene- old age, Plut. 3. 338.
rous, noble, AQ. 1.2. manly— liberal rich — ,
yj, the rank or office of a sena-

fruits, Dein. 328. 18. yewe&w, adverbially, tor, A. 10. 1.

,
,
generously,
sity, manliness
nobly, manfully.
abst. noun, genero-
adv. generously,
ot, ov, senatorial— senatorial wine,

choice, costly

,

senatorial oath, an oath im-
posed on the people by the senate.
, ,, , -
,
,
6, a generous, brave man, Ra- , senate, Rhesus, 402.
,
nae, 179. a species of shield made of

, ,,
^,
,
1708.

,
,
, noble mindedness, Phoen.
, noble-minded, magni-
twigs or osiers, and used by the Persians, a
corselet, buckler, plur.
or huts as places to shelter, Dem. 284. 24.
booths

,
ficent— adv. magnificently.
a thing produced, off-
Its origin is the Heb. TO, gor, to sojourn,
tarry. Hence it means a place ,to shelter
.
,
to,
spring, race, brood, Mat. 3. 7. or cover, though the form for this is

, ,
,,
yi, ov, produced by nature, born,
Mat. 11. 11. — native, and not made by art.

,
, ,
yj, ov, fit to produce.

membra genitalia productive,—


hence by changing r into 1, megalia, which
may be gathered from Virgil Mw. 1. to be
of Phoenician origin.
,
a shield-bearer, A. 1. 8. 6.
Long.

,
,
founder
, ,,
,
15.

,a
origin, II. o. 58.
ancestors, Hipp. 683.
thing produced or born, a
race, kind, genus— species, variety

,

birth,
offspring, Acts 17. 28.
a producer,

— sex, Septem,

f.

Gen. 25.

relish,
I cause another to taste, ren-
der sweet, Herod. 7. 46. give to taste,

enjoy
30.
I
pain, suffer, Mat. 16. 28.
taste


108. — taste
f.

— taste food,
taste

aor. 1.
eat, taste
taste pleasure,
labour, experience,
m.

\, - , make a

,
family, 4. 6. sort, nation 90. Trach. danger, try,

, , , , ,
1 1

This word
, , sorts or diversities of tongues.
is often redundant, yiuog

the race of demons, for de-


trial of,

186.
. . 258.
a thing to be tasted, Acharn.

mons, for &C. ,


a pass covered or defend-
, ),

, ,
a cheek, jaw, II.
q,
hatchet, Soph. Elect. 195.
416.

6, a crane— a species of dance in-

stituted by Theseus to celebrate his deli-


. — ed,
s. 89.
fr. the Heb. 23,
to cover a bridge, II.
the bridges or dams
of war, i. e. places where the torrents of
war are stopped up or are sheltered from

, ,
2,
verance from the labyrinth, Luc. 2. 288.

,, ,, , contr. plur. - the brunt of battle. JDamm takes the bridges


of war to be the spaces or intervals between
,
, ,, ,
Ion. honour, a gift
contr. the ranks, II. . 371. S. 378.
given by way of honour, reward prize, —dignity, a bridge of the sea, the Isthmus of Corinth,
privilege,

^,
v. 182.
II.

a, ov,
.

c.
323.

, , ,
surpassing in age and dignity, venerable,

,
aged hand, infirm, Hecub. 64. substantive-
,
— authority,
s.
Nem.

means of a
Herod.
made
6. 67.
f. Ijoin the opposite banks by
bridge,
4. 118. aor. 1. pass,
throw a bridge over,

passable by a bridge, Luc. 3. 637.


was

,
,
ly, an old man, a sage.
ai

&,
270. Dem. 1369. ult.

,,.
,,
elders.
the women of rank, II. . 87.

, ,, .,,
an aged, venerable tree.
ov,
— \.venerable.
wrinkled^g. ,,
I reproach, or, as the Hebrew verb
means, to cover with pitch, i.e. treat with in-
dignity, scoff at, Plut. 3. 85.
6, a scoffer, 3. 71.

, or Dor.
— ,, ,
earth, ground,
,

, ,,
ov, land, see a spot of
I honour —honour with bestow gifts, ground.
upon, Od. . 441. — honour with the tongue, ,, earthy — having a deep soil.
celebrate, extol. A. 6. 4. 3.
winning the reward of ho- ,
a describer of the earth, a ge-

,,
ov,
nour, Pyth.
6,
2. 82.
a man to be honoured for his
ographer. I describe the sur-

face of the earth, am a geographer.— -


—— — — —— a — — — ——

,
,
269

, ,
A
- 270

5.,
nence.
101.
,,
,, . ,,,, ,, , ,
earth, geography.
ov, o,
y, a description of places on the

a rising ground, a hill, Theo.

a measurer of the ground,


,
, a mound, emi-
ried in, exulted,
,
II.

imp.
rejoicing,

. 446.
f.

II. . 148,
Theo.


Nem.
7. 134.
contr.
3. 56. part,

^, ,

grow, become, old
old age,

,
ov, 6, I

,
a land-surveyor, a geometrician, 4. 2. decay, opp. to Od. y\. 120.

,
10. f. ?>, I measure, survey a, ov, old, aged,

/, .-
the ground, measure the sea, Luc. 3. 639. venerable, Pers. 171. Pyth. 4. 216.

,,
practise geometry. , land-

, ov, 6, , one who supports his

,
,
surveying, geometry. , ov, aged parents, Ajax, 571.

,
,
tion.

,
(>,
of geometry, geometrical.

,
the science of geometry or mensura-
adv. geometrically.
sc.


I maintain when old, Med. 1027.

Plut. 6. 424.
,
, maintenance in old age,

,
ov, 6, destitute of land liable to , one who supports old
ov, 6,
famine, poor, Herod. 8. 3. age, Dem.
1400. —
supplying food for old
ov, 6, a labourer or tiller of the age, i. e. hope, Plut. 7. 864.

,
,
ground.

,
150.

. ,,,, %, , one who


,
husbandry, Phocyl.

treads the ground,


I maintain an aged parent, Dem. 1399. 17.

age.
ij, ,
a maintenance in old

,^,,
a tiller of the land, Herod. 7. 28. supporting an aged parent,

2, , ,
ov, 6, a tiller of the ground— Paul. Sil. 79. I provide for an

, ,
vine-dresser,
ov,
f.
John 15. 1.
a farm, vineyard, 1 Cor. 3. 9.
I cultivate the ground, till.
aged parent, Luc. 2. 531.


Dor.
,
, voice, speech, II. . 437.
I speak aloud

o<

, , ,,
husbandmen, Ad. 2. 14.

,
agriculture, tillage, husbandry, — —
sound proclaim, celebrate, Nem. 7.122.
babble, brawl, croak, Olym. 2. 158. di- —
.

,
,
vulge, Hipp. 213. h. garrio.

^,
4. 2. 3.
^,, ,
, , agricultural, Pax, the stone or refuse of the

,n, ov, c. ov,

, ,
,—
551. expert in agriculture grape. of stone-grape.

,
sc. the works of agriculture, a trea- earth-born, a giant, Od. >j.206.
, , giant-like, gigantic.

,
,
tise on agriculture.—
/,

, ,
,, , dig the ground, Herod. 4. 200.

,
giant, Phoen. 130.

, sc.
the art of tilling the ground, agricul-
ture, O. 5. 18.

), ,, , ov, , earth-born, a
sons of the earth.
,

aor. 2.
ov,
, a battle of the giants.
giant-slaying, Here. F. 1191.
a hinge, joint,
;,
I know,
f.
. 12. 6.

discover, per-

,
,
, , adv. for from the ground, or
from the foundation, utterly, (Ed. C. 1662.
ov, to, a green leek or onion.
— decree, know by the touch,
ceive, learn
Mark 5. 29. cause to know, make
feel, —
known — know onefrom another, distinguish.
—understand, comprehend,
,
,
n, ov, delighted, glad, II. v. 80.

, , v\, joy, gladness, II. v. 29. — I know an


acquaintance, recognise,
23. — know what
ac-

,
, , , , /,
earthy, A. 7. 8. 7.
of earth, Simon. 21.
w, ov,


heavy, dull, Luc. 1. 24.
knowledge, Mat. 7.
determine, judge, think approve, Rom. 7. —
to do,

. . ,
ov, 6, a man of the earth, a 15.— treat one as known, kindly receive,
Heb. —

,
peasant or clod-hopper, yij, Trach. 32. 13. 23. f.

, am known,

,
lying on the ground, Call. 4. p. aor. I

,,
286.

, ov, 6,
called also

\,
a rising ground, A. 1. 5. 8.
acknowledged, decreed, shall re-
ceive knowledge, shall know, John 7. 17.
02, , , .

,
encompass, occupy the milk, II. 471.

,
f. I

,.
ground, a land-holder, Herod. 7. milky, milk-house, dairy.
a,

,, .
ov,
ov, one who feeds on milk.

,, ,
190.

, ,, fallen to, dropped in the ground, I am milky or juicy, said of herbs.

, , /, , , ,,
Phcen. 682. a tub for curdling milk.
the ground, Rhes. 75. , , from , to see,
I cultivate
, for

glad,
imp.

,
127. aor.
delighted,

these things,
Dor.

1.

.
,
f.

190. Optat.

II. /.
I rejoice, am

he delights, sports, Theo. 1.54.


he was glad, he rejoiced, II, .
for
Mo\.
who would
77. p. m. ,
he was

rejoice in
he glo-
,
soreness or running of the eyes, lippitudo.

in

. 34.
II. .
or blear-eyed

192. Ranas, 586.


J7, ov, grey, azure, cserulean,

said of serpents as having piercing


eyes, Olym. 8. 48.
vid. Heyn.

II.
— — —— — —

,,,
271
, an owl. , youth, Od. 152. eager, impatient— sweet
f.
A m

,
,
sc. to carry an owl to Athens, Luc. desire, keen

, —

sweet rage, Isthm. 2. 5S.

,,
,
1. 37. or, as we should say, to carry coals to ardent sweet deception, delusive— sweet

, ,,
Newcastle. lyre, soothing, enchanting, sweet-
jj, ov, grey, sea-green, II. <r. 34.
,
ness, sweet things

, , - ,, , greyishness. 9j, sweetness, Long. 34.


,
a sea-god, the poetic name of sweet-minded, placid, gentle,

,
6, ov,

, ,
a sea monster.
glaucus.

,
•, iho;, ,

—having
, ,a

little II. v. 467.

the mind, placidity.


,
,
, the being delightful to

,
blue-eyed

,
bright, pier- I sweeten, O. 19. 19.

,
f.

cing eyes. These epithets are applied to shedding warm tears.


,
, ,
serpents, to lions, and to Minerva. bestowing sweet favours.

, ^,
, , ,, ,,
, ,
,
piercing look,

) ,, ,
f.

f. ,
II.

,,,
I roll

grey, azure,
the eyes, give a fierce,
172.
ace.

(a corrup. of
vate, mark, Hes. a. 431. engrave
a den, cave,
Olym. 3. 23.

— polish.
Hes. . 532.
I
for

exca- Dor.
having delicate skin.
,
sweetly sounding,
ov, yielding sweet fruit, Theo.
11. 46. said of a vine.

or mellow apple, Call. 6. 29.

, ,
sweet to utter,
a sweet ,,
.
,-
- , ,,
a, ov, c. excavated, hollow melody of speech, Meleager, 89.
— spacious, II. o. 402. a I sweetly utter, Meleag. 23.

,
,
,
capacious harbour,

,
, ,
low, deep-sounding lyre smooth, elegant,

,
,
smoothness, Luc.

,

Long. 10.6. clever, Aves, 1272.

,
adv. neatly, elegantly.

3. 496.

,
,
a hol-

neatness,
engrave, cut
Theo. Ep.

sculptor's hand,
,
I sing sweetly,

— polish — scoop, Troad.


7.
6,
Theo.
f.

the art of engraving


Theo. 28.
, 15. 145.
I carve,
1 306.

— the

,
).

, — , the herb ov, graven, fit for engraving, cut.

,
pennyroyal, horned-poppy, Theo. 5. 56.

, ,,
must, new wine,
the sweet juice of the vine,
, , a carving
, a sculptor.
•/, , carving, sculpture.
carver,
tool, chisel.

,
Acts 2. 13.

,
q,
, ,,
,—
2, ,
6, a drinker of sweet or fresh

wine, i. e. a Satyr, Leon. Tar. 18.


, the virgin-like image in the eye

,
arrow to which
the notch of an
the bow-string is applied, II.

— tongue-piece.
ij, Att.
. 122.
speech — the

,6.
pupil or ball of the eye
164.
a timid girl, 11.
—view, hence glance.
tongue
,
, vexation occasioned by
.
,

,

, , , ,— that on which the eye glances
with desire ornaments, II.
202,

,
192.
ov, viscous, glutinous, sticky
clammy slippery, Nub. 481.— viscous
in temper, mean, sordid, Luc. 3. 372.
neut. phir. adverbially, most
greedily or wretchedly meanly,
. ', ,
the tongue, Med. 525.
*j, the tongue of a musical

strument, or that part which is applied to


the mouth, Luc. 1. 850.

)(,
,,
in-

a box to keep the tongues

I cut off the tongue.



of wind instruments a pouch, Long. 44.

,
,,;,
,
,
stingily, hardly, E. 7. 2. 17.
, viscidity, tenacity stin-
giness, Plut. 6. 477.— pliableness.

, , ^. 6, an importunate beggar.

-,
I flatter with the tongue.
I make the tongues of musical

instruments, Vespae, 1274.

, , ,
I turn about my tongue, I
blab— am loquacious, Nubes, 790.

,
ov, rendered
threadbare by

,,
,,
for, Herod.
I cling to
2.
trifling disputes,

102.
sf,
an object,
Nub. 1000.

I am eager ,
spear,

,, —
i.
, for
, —
bone cheek, 11. -. 405.
the tongue of a
the point, cuspie, U.
e. 274.
, a jaw —jaw- ,
.

, , the
-
, —glueopp. to •,
lees of oil adjective- f. I bend, bend a man from
sordid, Nub. 448. — his purpose through fear, overawe, Prom.

, , , -
ly, feeble,

,,
,
lubricous, crafty. 1003.
, , glutinous, viscous, gummy.

, ,, , ,
2,
also
,
,,
6, a buttock, clunis,
c.
sweet sweet sleep,

balmy, refreshing sweet water, fresh, opp.
to —
or

sweet age, i. e. age full of joy,



II. g, 66.
,,
f.
n, ov, bent, curved, II. I. 369.

I am carded
,
I comb, card wool,

wool when combed torn to pieces by


trailing on the ground, Ajax, 1050.
or

torn or lacerated as

,
6, a carder of wool,
——— — — — —— — —— — ——

,
273

, ,
, a fuller—
Be. ,,
a fuller's art.
a, ov, for born, and not ad-
ventitious, genuine, legitimate, opp. to
a
y, ov, of a fuller,

,,
yvx- of fighting— decline fighting from a sense
of weakness, yield, Herod. 7. ISO.
tuate in mind, Aves, 556.
ov — ^,
I fluc-

qnoc, 6, a person who



274

.
spurious,

4. 3. 1. pure, and not adul-
terated own — native, opp. to
/,
— -,
knows well, a competent judge, Acts 26. s.

-, capable of knowing, Pint. 10. 269.



nature ,
affectionate,

, ,,,
, that which is
genuine or natural, the genuine feelings of
adv. with genuine affec-

-, ov, known, discovered, E. 2. 3. 1 8.
adv. notoriously, openly.
known, II. r,. 400. a relative,
n, ov, —

, , ,^, - 0,
tion, sincerely
cest. 680.

,
with truth, in reality, Al-

ov, 6, darkness a black storm, Heb. —


a brother, II. o. 850.
f. Heb. HV\ I express woe, la-
ment, bewail, part,

,
,
', ,, ,
lamenting woefully, II. . 418.

,
12. 18. f. I render dark, poet,

,
cover with a cloud a, ov mourning over, Od. /. 467. imp.

,
,
,
, , .
Troad. 79.

, ,
adv.

, ,,
proof, Herod.
,
,

I
so;,

know, see
,, ;,
dark,

upon the knees,

,
7.
sentiment, opinion,
y,
52.
dismal— tempestuous,

knowledge,
II. e. 68.

sentiment,


f.

II.

Att.
m.
.

imp.
Ion.

124.
f. ,,
contr.
Od. S. 92,

aor.
to lament, II. . 502.
I lament, II. . 500.
or

1.
he lamented or wept,
she will lament or mourn,

inf.

vice,
, , ,
judgement,

6. 37.
•/—

decree, —
--ad-
approbation, favour, Herod.
will, discretion, visions or
yon, ,, ,
also ov, 6, a song of woe, used
cither in lamenting the dead, or evoking the
spirits of the dead, woe, lamentation, II. a.

,forms originating in violent passions that


misled the eyes, Ajaxj 52. science, know-

,,
ledge, £77/5-^44)7.

ov, to, a maxim or



saying.

,
51.

ful,
— incantation —
£#/<r(sc.
a,
Phcen.
— ov

), Hec.
1 583.
grief,

,
tj^si

84,
ov,
sorrow.
woeful, mourn-

some dismal
yos-
tidings

, ,
, ,, ,
sentimental, discerning
6, will befall usalready woeful.
instructive an index, proof
substantively, woeful, plaintive, xL 287.
— a judge, skilful observer, Agam. 1139. , an enchanter, sorcerer a de- —

,
Att. 1. 4. 5. oi

&, ,
as showing their age.
the teeth of horses,

,,
ceiver, Hipp. 1038. >?, ov, given

to magic or sorcery, deceitful, magical

, , ,
, ov,

.
capable of knowing or dis- f. I deceive, bewitch, charm,

,
, -
cerning, skilful, sagacious,

, one who coins maxims


ov,
4. 2. 10. Plut.
sorcery
9.
— deception.
, murmur, John
64. , witchcraft,

, ,
, , ,
brain-racking cares, Nubes, 949.
coin sentences, rack my brains —
I
given to coin sentences, sen-
tentious, Equit. 1376.
, ,/,
ble — grunt — coo
f.

complaint, Phil. 2. 1 4.
,,
I

murmuring, grumbling,
7.

ov, 6, a
ov,
32. grum-
6, and

, , ,,
f. I make known, declare, murmurer, grumbler.
—rCall — ,
to mind,
,
a, ov, round.

,
ov,
recognise,know, — distinguish, , or , a turnip,
— discover, (Ed. T. 546. round cake, Pax.

,
have knowledge of from roundness, a

,
its

, am 28.

,
round, turn round.

,
f. p. f.

,
am made known, am
aor. 1.

recognised, Dem. 1
I

ov, capable of being known, distin-


390. 02, ov, 6, freight,

ing tooth, Att. 1. 4. 6.


Acts 21. 3.
ov, 6, a wedge, Od. e. 248. a grind-
ov, 6, a —
guished, discernible, K. 6. 1 5. known, fa- — jaw-tooth, grinder, dens molaris.
miliar substantively, a person known, a ov, firmly bound, wedged.
friend, acquaintance, Od. 8. a disciple . — ,,
coupled with nails, firmly

,
,,
a chief, a nobleman, E. 2. 2. 3. —
adv. plainly, distinctly,
^-
, ,
wedged words, Ranaj, 844. i. e. words so

, ,
long as to be nailed like boards together.
-
,
he treated me as an intimate friend, Dem.
1247. 14.

,
, i], the knowing, Luc. 3. 595.

,
a mark by which a thing
may be known sign, Luc. 1. 817.
, —
,
,
,
,
/, ,
- ,
f. I fasten with pegs, I nail,
I am nailed, wedged, Equit. 461.

'/},

ov, 6,
, a
birth
seed
parent, fr. ,
— seed — offspring,
— birth,
Mat.

Dem. 1390. 9.
II.
10. 21.
. 539.

trine, 1
', knowledge— discernment, At.
4. 8. 11.— verdict, Dem. 1020. ult.

,, Tim.
f.
6. 20.

\, 1
doc-

know the consequence



, ,
offspring,
v\,
Choeph. 250.
ov, c.
ductive, prolific, Long. 8.
, afflicted

449.— fruit.
II. v.

, pro-
— native, Ran. 96.
with a gonorrhoea.
— — ——— —— —— — —

,
,, ,, ,., ,
273

or
, , , labour under a gonorrhoea,
gen.
a knee, vj
by transp.
on
— or accused, Dem.
the accuser, A?r.
,
A
311. 3. part. 6

for
1. 1. 1.
--
a thing
270'

, .
the knees of the gods, i. e. in their power
or at their disposal, II. . 514. a knot or

,
joint in a reed or stalk, internodium.

\, I cause to bend the knees.


,

written, a letter, character— things consist-
ing of letters, a writing, epistle, record, law,
charter, edict. In this sense it is generally
in the plural, y Jcnoivledge ex- —

, , ,, ,
falling on the knees pressed in letters, literature, principles of
kneeling seats, Phcen. 302. I knowledge — inscription, picture, Theo.
fall down on my knees, kneel supplicate — 15. 81.
on my knees, Mark 1. 40. ,, a register, a book of

, ,
f. I embrace the knees
of a person, supplicate, Od. .

, ,, ,
a grasping of the knees, ,, , 66.—-
accounts,
— school.
Dem. 1 1 1 1.22.— record, 600. 1 7.

a writer, clerk, purser of


— secretary, recorder— a pettifogger,
, , ^,^,
supplication, Lye. 1243. a ship
— —

, ,
oo; , a Gorgon, one Dem. 321. a scribe or teacher of the law
of the three daughters of Phorcus, named among the Hebrews I offi-

Medusa, Stheno, Euryale of the ciate as ascribe, I am a clerk, Dem. 315.9.


Gorgons, Gorgonean, . 741. 2. 4. 24. , , note, bil-

,
II. -thiov,
Prom. 797. —
crested, Minerva, Equit. 1181. -
\, , Gorgon- let, a bill of exchange, Dem. 1283. 4.

.
yi, ov, of letters, skilful in
read-

,
i. e.
, having a Gorgon's head on
-
ing and writing, 4. 2. 20.— inscribed
its

^,
, ^,
back, Acharn. 1123. Gorgon-graved
^, — , and
shields, with letters, lettered cups, Luc. 3. 333.

, , Gorgon-eyed,
jj

terrific, -, A jax, 450.


grammatical. It is also used as a noun, a
grammarian, philologist, clerk
,, , ,/,

,
ov, adj. c. fierce-looking, ter- 7], sc. the art of grammar,

:, . rific—keen, quick, 4. 4. l.
- -,, philology, literature.

,
I hasten — am fierce-looking, ,
a schoolmaster, Dem.
. 6,

or , /, ,
spirited fiery horse,
aj, a place under

ground where malefactors were confined


and compelled to hew stones, a pit, dun-
geon, Herod. 3. 145. Heb. to cut or 2.
10. 4.

'.,
,, , ,-
431. 24. scribe, secretary, Herod. 3. 123.
a grammarian, Luc.

ters, a schoolmaster
,
1. 656.
, , a teacher of
a place to teach letters, a school.
let-

. one who become

,)
polish stones, hence career.
yaw, for ys ,
wherefore, therefore, ac-
— at
bent by hard study, a literary drudge, Dem.
6, is

,,, cordingly,
least,
Eccles. 137.
Nubes, 882.— indeed, CEd. C. 24.
,, a fertile spot,
Plutus, 184.

a rich soil,
297. fr.
,.?,7, , , a place where
registers or the public records are kept,

,, /, , / in a choice part,
tivated part, of a vineyard, II. . 57.
a, ov, old, withered, from
dry sea onion, Theo. 5. 121. ypaia,

i. e. the most cul-




yoaiutov,
the rolls, or archives.

,, ,
9. 208.
q, (from
,
6, a letter-carrier.

a line or mark
—the lists, Acharn. 482. the goal, Pyth.

the line on a chess board, the

, ^,^,,
, , an old woman, beldame, Dem. 313.
|)en.
, — , a Grecian, 6, , last

,
pawn which could not be moved but in the
extremity, and therefore called
the sacred line. Hence the proverb,
\, he
, ),
'
one of the Greeks
Graecus
of the Greeks.

,, (for
f. -,
der, direct, prescribe
express —
p.
write
adv. after the


write an or-
I
write my sentiments,
pass,

the Greeks,
manner

.- ,, ,
to>j

, ^,
painted—
n, ov,

a,
xti
the pawn of the sacred line, i. e. has re-
course to the last shift, Theo. 6. 18.
a writer, engraver.
/

written, inscribed, Rom. 2. 1 5.


on, to be written, carved or
displaces

,
write a laic, enact, decree, intro- it is necessary to write,


duce a motion, propose- write down rides,
— ^,we must direct,
,,
Itt. 2. 1.
.
instruct, teach write of a thing before it
happens, predict, John I. 46. write of —
, , a scratch, Od.
, a painter, scribe.
228.

things past, relate, describe write the re-


semblance of a person, paint, engrave, (hence
to grave, and also by prefixing s, scribo)
scratch, lacerate, II. . 599.
written —
write a charge against another,
accuse, aor. l.m. syox-Jsaro, he impeached
I am, ,/, ,



suit,

<,
,
^, a picture, painting
record document—
a writing
accusation, libel.
an action for assault law-
to gain the trial.
], ov,

skilful in painting,
graphic povver, skill in


writing <ar
— —— — — —— — — — ——— —

,,, ,
.

277 T^
painting, an error of of shelter or protection, exposed, unpro-

,
the transcriber adv. graphically, tected—destitute of knowledge or virtue,

, after the manner of a painter


. ignorant, immoral, Rev. 3. 17. destitute —

, ,, , ,
., , the art of painting or writing, sc.
q, a pen, a pencil. -,
of the body, unencumbered, unembodied

,, ,
soul, sc. Mark
,
1 4. 5 1

,, ,
, or

,
(from aged) adj. naked,
a female wrinkled with age, an old woman, —
mostly naked inured, trained, Hipp. 34.

, , ,, /,
1 1


a hag froth, Plut. 1207. Luc. 2. 234. —bare, unmanned.
,
of old women, silly, 1 Tim. 4. 7.
keep awake, watch, opp.
f. p. pass, .-

,
f. I exercise naked, I practise, disci-
I
to Mark is. 34. am on my guard — pline, inure, 2 Pet. 2. 14. bring under a —

am vigilant in securing an
,. yoke, harass, Prom. 606. 612.

,, ,
against danger

,
02,, , .
,
expected good, alert,

^, ,, -/,
,
a fisherman, Theo. I. 39.
1.4. 20. see
a net, a hook to catch fish.
ov, o,
I discipline,

exercise,

,,
it is

-.
inure myself— am disciplined.
necessary to discipline, must
2. 1. 28.

,
, or I catch fish. an exercise, Plut. 10. 603.
f.

,
-
,
scil. the art of fishing. exercise,1 Tim. 4. 8.— dis-

,
sj,

ov, , a net, Vesp. 40. a puzzle — cipline, training ov, ,


,
- ^,
,

, ^, captious, Luc. 2. 674.


ov, 6, properly the iron part of a ja-
velin, a javelin ov, or
va-fYiQiou,
sium or
a place for exercise, the
palaestra.
ov, o, a president of the gym-
gymna-

,
one who fights with, or bears, a
javelin, a skirmisher, Polyb. 1. 33. 9.
indecl. properly a chip or splinter aris-
nasium, gymnasiarch

. 1. 13. ,,
side in, am president of the gymnasium,
I pre-

, the office ,

, ,
ing from the cutting of stones, fr. the Heb. of a president in the gymnasium, ib. O. 2. 6.
— ,-,
,,
~U the parings of a nail, or any thing of

-
no value, Plutus, 1 7.
ov, 6, one who exercises himself

.
or teaches the public exercises to others

,
, , ,
grunt,

,,
f.

a^a
may you mutter ?

, ,
I mutter, grunt

, , grunting
-tv vfth; Lysist. 657,
must a fencing-master,

,
2. 1. 20.

n, ov, fit for, skilful in the exer-


cises of the palaestra, gymnastic

,
I grunt. adv. as in the gymnasium, with the
.
-,
, crooked, aquiline,
m, ov, 8. 4. 9.
y, crookedness of fhe nose.
6, a bird with a crooked beak, a
skill of a combatant, Vespae, 1 207.

, \, vj, sc. ,,
the gymnastic 3rt.

,
6, or ov, 6, a light-

, Prom. 801. ov, a grif- armed soldier, A. 1. 2. 3. The


griifin,
fin-eagle, Ran. 928. were archers or slingers, and therefore
, a box of heavy-armed.
Tvahov,
palm, Hes.
ov,
trumpery.
, a cavity— cavity of
499. — cavity of a
u.
trash,
the hand,
breast-plate,
,/,
skirmishers, opp. to
I am destitute of clothes, am
bare, 1 Cor. 4. 1 1 —
carry light arms.
.

,
, , a band or corps of light-
the hollow part, namely, the middle, 1. v. yvpvYiTia,
507.— cavity of a rock, a cave, valley, Nem.
10. 106. —
cavity of a goblet, a hollow ca- ,, ,
armed infantry, Thuc. 4. 23 3.
gymnastic, ascetic philosophy.
',

,
, ,
pacious goblet, Iphig. A. 1052. a cavity , oz/,fit for exercise,
by which a place is defended, i. e. an en- arms used on the parade, light arms, 1. .
,trenchment, bulwark, Thesm. 1 6.
&, Ion. yv/i, , yvia, ,, a limb
of the earth, a field, land region, tract, —
,
1 2. 4. naked games, i. e.
such games as boys were exercised in when
naked,orthegymnasticgames,Dem.256.pen.

,Prom. 714. Theo.


ov, a limb,
,.,
II.
25. 30.
y. 34.
fr. .

, or , 7} t

a solemn dance performed by Spartan boys


,

,
yv /,, o*,lame. a game in which boys were exercised,

,, ,, ,,
yvtoZoi^rig, fc,
Iame,Il.S.402.
crushing the limbs.
Prom. 168.
.
,-, 1. 2. 61.
an Tndian philosopher,

.
fetters, ov, c,

,,
invigorating the limbs
,,
so called from the rigour of his discipline.

,
able-bodied, Pyth. 3. 12.
,
6, a limb-subduer, a victori-

ous pugilist, Isthm. 5. 75. ,



),
,, , -
vj, nakedness, 2 Cor. 11. 27.

moral nakedness, shame, Rev. 3. 8.


f. 1 render naked, strip

2,
ov, o, a wicker vessel used by a sol-
dier to carry his provisions, Acharn. 1096.


ov, destitute — destitute of
naked destitute of covering, bare, visible,
clothes, , , /, ,
tected,
I am naked
II.

obs.
.
am unarmed, unpro-
428. Od.

female in an age to produce, from


a

. 841.
jj, voc.


opp. to -, —
Heb. 4. 13. destitute of arms, unarmed,
. 4. 3. 5. — destitute /,
a woman, opp. to
a husband
a wife, opp. to

a married woman, opp.
2

— — — —— —— —
279
to ^. yvuvi , A

,
wife of a father,
, o&, for yfe earth,
A
, —
I

Prom. 584.
earth,
280

i. e. step-mother,
yvvxtxctgiov, yvpaiov, ov,
a silly woman,
1 Cor.

2 Tim. S. 6. Dem. 787. 29.


,
5. I.
a little
, $,,
woman,
q, ice, crystal necklace, or an
image suspended to it, Theo. 2. 110.
f. by sync, lota, I burn, kindle,

- , ,
yvvociKHog, a, Ion. yvvxiK/iiog, yi, ov, per-
ov, imp. lxhv,for he lighted,made ablaz-
taining to women, of a woman, womanish, ing fire, II. . 211. flamed, . 4. p. m. hive,
Aw. 2. 7. 5. yvvoiixs'iog, one that is wo-
manish in character, Luc. 1. 445.
raged, v. 18. plup.
burning or blazing, U. 35. .
I ,,
had burnt, was

ndoit, that which belongs to women, a wo-


man's apartment or chamber, ywatx.ua,
,, subj.

am kindled burn, blaze, am on fire, f. 2.
shall be consumed, II. 375. .

,. ,
the usual complaints peculiar to women, his eyes blaze, flash fire, Od. . 132.
scil. iurh Gen. ]8. 11. see to divide. Zxta, to feast, and
'/,:()., ov, proclaimed by a woman, to learn.
originating in a woman's praise, Agam. 499. B«<V> '(,
or %xg, "hxoog, q, a log or splinter
yvvxixo/uxv/ig, or yvvxtfixvyg, sog, woman- of wood for burning, a torch, II. a. 492.
the torch of discord, battle, ev ;' (for )
,
. mad, Meleager, S. I am
woman-mad, Thesm. 583.
yv-jouKoplpo;, ov, imitating a woman, timid,
Prom. 1013. ,.
yvvxtxopo^og, ov, woman-like, Bacch. 853.
'hvy^Yi ftivqvxi, to mix in destructive battle,
v. 286. Ixhov, ov, a small torch.
ov, o, a torch-bearer in the Eleusi-
nian mysteries, Theo. Char. 3.
,
,-
,
'/077•,],

,,
eoc,fullof women, Alcest. 952.
yvvxiKo^oivoz, ov, undertaken to avenge a
woman, Again. 234.
'/,,
«^, tog, becoming a woman.
ov, having a woman's voice.
ov, partial towomen,Theo.8. 60.
yvuccixujy, avog, 6, and yvu a waring, ihog, q,
,,, ,
I bear a torch, Troad. 343. imp.

yielded light, blazed, Meleager, 125.


lighted with lamps
ug, the bearing a torch.
Ixioc, x,ov, burning, raging, ^xixig
in flaming battles, i. e. battles with a furi-
ous enemy a flaming warrior, enemy, —
women's apartment, .
5. 5. 1. O. 9. 5. Ran. 1 054. Ixix o^oy,against the snares

,
yvt'ctiAolyig, sg, woman-like, Luc. 1. 50.

ywuic, ,
yvvxtog, ov, womanish, Od. 520.
effeminate, Theo. 22. 69. cunnus.
or yvQiog, x, ov, round, curved, Od.
r. 246. Heb. 1)j, gur, hence by inserting
.Ajax, 795.
,
of the enemy, 925.— shining, illustrious,

ovog, 6, q, one whose mind is on


war, and not on ivomen or other pleasures,
warlike, Od. a. 48.
the digamma, curvus. Ixvog, , ov, for torches, dry, Od. o. 321.
yvgog, ov, 6, a circle —
a sort of round cake. Ixog,
. ,,
,, , ,
light, torch, 11. 647. .

,
yvQooi, f. ,
yv^ovoiTog, having a round back,
I encircle— ingraft.
yvnoxjig, mg, q, circuit, rotation.
yvTrog, 6, a vulture, II. . 237.
perf.
f. or

,
(I light up, cause
to appear or examine in the light) learn,

-,
he hath learnt, Od. S. 134.

,—
part. having acquired by learn-
,
,yvTrxQiou, ov,

,, , ,
a hole in a rock where vul-
tures nestle, Equit. 790.
ov, 6, baked earth, yn,
dens, caverns yu'hux,
ing, Od.

,
learn, taught, . 233. f.
gypsum.
,
2,
.
61. p.m. htxev, hath caused to

shall learn,
shalt
for
II.
I
.
1&,
m. >?•;, thou
61.
learn or be taught, Od. y. 187.
f.

aor.

,gur,
whirlpools, Lye. 376. from Heb.
being changed into V.
*")

xg, q, a corner —
angle, corner of a
2. pass, elxyv, I learnt cr taught myself,
discovered, observed, II. y. 208. inf. Ixqvxi,
),?, to know, Od. . 493. 11. 487. .
5.
street, i. e. the most public place, Mat. 6.

—quarter, Rev. 20. 8.— ridge.


yuvixiog, of a corner, yavixiog
stone. yavn&yg, eg, tog, angular.
yavihto», ov,
)»,
,acorner or angle.
little
I form an angle— yavtxapog, ov, 6,
;, a corner
}, ,
part, Ixstg, being taught in,
7. 98. perf. inf. pass,

ovog, C.
Aur,(), i^og, 6,
;,
,,
^;,
for Islxauxi,
assure myself of, observe, learn, Od. 316.
411.

an interrogative, and probably the im-


knowing, Olym.

skilful, II.
a husband's brother, II. y. 180.
.
o.

, the drawing into a point or angle, round-


ing of luords^ Ranae, 987.
ov, 6, a quiver, II. 54. .
perative of

02,
y.xi
«;, ;,
tell me? why, pray? vug ;, how pray,
how then?
what, pray, are these things? 0.
ov, 6,
;
why,

,
an Athenian
;,
*<riv;
7. 17.
and

distin-
guished by his skill in statuary and archi-
. tecture, Daedalus, Ovid. Met. lib. 8. 166.

, /?, , ov, or ;:,


ooiihou\iiog, a,

A \, or an inseparable particle, and


augmenting (he sense, vcrv, greatlv.
ov, curiously wrought, polished, variegated,
adorned, Hec. 4 76. II. L 195.
—— — — —
IS

,
^^>,

$,
with

,
varnish,
f. — /),
ingeniously plan, carve, polish,
art,
Oljm.
1, 169.
,
f. , I work

,,
mind

^-
ous,
— am a demoniac,
Mat. 4. 14. a person
was called
, or
A
i. mad and furi-
e.
who thus Buffered
282

,,
a curious workmanship. one possessed or carried away by a
an image of gods, a mas- demon.
,
,
terly piece of art, Theo. 1. S2. Pyth. 5. 45.
'hailochoftgy
, ,
curiously wrought.
,,, , the being blinded by
a demon, strange infatuation, Polyb. 28. 9. 4.

^, ,
an artificer, Leon. Tar. 28. f. I distribute meat, carve

,,,,
I mark out, distinguish by a torch.
fattopetf, I divide for myself, distribute, perf.

, Ion. for are divided,


cut off, separated, Od. x. 23. imp. Ixtsro,

-,
,
,,^, ,
prepare a feast, celebrate,
A. 123. aor. 1.
II. r. 299. Iphig.

he feasted, enter-
tained, Herod. 1. 162. aor. 1. m.
for they feasted upon, consumed,
^,
,
he dispensed, carved, o. 140.

,,
Nem.
for 9. 56.

, Od. x. 48. entertainment, II. x. 575.


pres. is torn, distracted, feast,

for
themselves, II.
f.

,
they divided among
S68. perf. .
I divide, aor. 1 m..

<?, ,
, ,, —
,
from a
), a feast, II. .. 217.
feast, Theo.
banquet, II. 496.
17. 28.
.

,
feast,
these are distributed, a. 125.
/, f. I divide rend lacerate, — — ^, ~, t. 70.
I give a feast, entertain,
f. ,, II.

I
mangle, tear the hair, II. &-. 27. BiBfii/y^sj/o;
4, ,
feast myself, feed upon, . 305.

,
,
>
5jT0£, having his heart pierced. a feaster, Prom. 1020.

,
6,

,,
Svpov, divided in mind, distracted. feed myself upon, Lye. 654.
I

,,
II.

, . 20.
/,, , , one who divides a feast, a carver.

,, ,
i'«r>7^

yoo;, heart-rending
, piercing,
woe, Septem, 992.
#-

/, ,
scil.

f.
by measure, II. . 262.
I carve, cook or prepare a

", , — ^,,
fr.

mon, —
,,
, tearing, piercing, Anacr. 42.
II. .
fiend, evil genius
146*.
slain in battle,

a god, divinity,
10.

a de- ,
,
,
feast, II. 7. 687. Od. 0. 322.

feast, Od.
, the art of serving up a
,
253.
6, one who prepares a feast,


a cook, carver one who feeds, a guest,

,,
idol, y. 420. The term properly denoted Od. . 621.
^, -
II.

, —

,,
the spirit of a man separated by death from f. aor. f.

the body. In this state it classed with su- by sync, ,, I bite, backbite, slan-
perior beings, though it was still thought der, Gal. 5. 15.
now with higher knowledge to be interested

.
in the affairs of men hence its origin Ixt-
Demons were supposed often to
enter the bodies of the living, in whom
they produced vice, disease and madness.
The Jews without exception deemed them
:

,, ,, ,


Persse, 571.
I bite, sting,
orbiting the mind, heart-rending,
Philoct. 715.
,
a creature that bites,
a devouring monster, Prom. 585. a viper
the sting of calumny, Pyth. 2. 97.
, — , —

,
/,
*,
,
,,
evil, while the pagans worshipped them as
gods, see Hes. . 121.
f. ma, I am influenced by, suffer

from, a demon am mad, At. 1 1 9. —


inspired by a demon, demoniac.
ov, of a demon, impure.

,
. . ,,,,
,
a tear, tears, hence lacrymae the
tears of a tree, rosin, gum.
,
shedding tears, weeping.
smiling in tears, II. . 484.
they poured themselves

, ,
c. of a demon in-
fluenced by good demon, happy, noble, II. ,,,.,
,,
in tears, burst into tears, Od. ». 415.
mournful war, M. Supp. 690.
.
,
190. —
divine influenced by an evil de-
mon, unhappy, wretched, infatuated,
sir. ^, $),
200. . ,,
,, .
I swim in tears, Od.r. 122.

causing tears to flow, mourn-


ov,

ful dirge, M. Supp. 775. weeping eyes,

, ,
wonderful of men, wonderful man. hence Here. F. 98.
the substantive ^,, , ,
an evil
-,, f. I shed tears, Trach. 328.
Prom.
genius, a demon, 1 Cor. 10. 20. produced — ov, tears-drippingj^oorf,
-.
^,
by a divine interposition, extraordinary,
,, 399.

, ,,
Air. 1. 3. 5. adv. by a divine ov, wept over, cherished with tears,
impulse, miraculously,

,,
ad-
,, Choeph. 234. deplorable, E. Elect. 1181.

,, ,\,
.
verbially, most happily, E. 7. 4. 3. I shed tears, II. x. 357.
f.

, , inspired by demons,
bolical, Jam. 3. 1

under an indwelling
I suffer
5.
dia- f.

,
weep, John 1 1. 35. xh. 656.

crymae, as Ulysses is from


I
a tear, weeping, hence la-

demon, am grievously afflicted in body or lamentable, Luc. 1. 553.


. — —— — — —— — —

,
02, —»,
283

^,
.

,,, , &,,
finger, toe, digit, foot,

,, ov,
,
ov,

a
ov,
little finger,
1
ou,
06.— dactyl.
,
a small ring.
a finger or digit long.
a ring, Luke 15. 22.
a fore
force,

heifer,
means
Jam.
,
one
3. 7.
Att.
fit
,
A
to have been brought under by

, Zxpakri, ,, tj, a
to be tamed, Theo. 1. 75.
ov, fed upon by bullocks.
284

, ,
ov, 6,
— of a finger consisting of
ov, f. I act as a heifer, am frisky,

dactyls. finger- counting, play the wanton, Pyth. 1 1. 38. blow about —
i. e. computation with the fingers, Pallad. 87. as the wind, dissipate, 5. 163.
,,
glove,. .
, —
y, a covering for the fingers,
8. 8. 9. beazle of a ring.

,&, /, , a female brought under the


marriage-yoke, a wife, II. . 503.

,
ov, pointed at, conspicuous, ov, man-subduing, Olym. 9.
Agam. 1341. I point out 119.

/-,,
with the finger, Dem. 790. 20. 02, , ,
/, a gift, loan — interest.

', causing pain in bend-


&. .
f. una, I lay out

,
money on interest,

, ,
ing the fingers, irksome, 437. lend, 3. 1. 19. I receive

,
, », finger- wearing distaff.
ov, o, a torch, fire-brand, II. o. 421.
, ov, blazing hot, Pint. 8. 632.
f. wco, Dor.
under the yoke, tame bring under the
.,
I bring

money on

/, , ,
ney borrowed.
1.
interest,
borrow knowledge, learn,
and

121, having raised


borrow, At.
2. 4. 45.

money —
2. 7. 2.

ov, , mo-
Thuc.
interest of

/xoaat, for
overcome,
,
yoke of power, subdue.
contr. of
,,
.

yoke of Hymen, I marry bring under the
,, ,,
- for
subdues, II. y,. 271.

368. aor. 2.
^,,
,. -
contr. of

&, ^«•,
pass.
they ,
money, recompense, Eur. Elect. 858.
^^,
,
,
ov, 6, one who lays out money on
interest, an usurer.
n, ou,
ov, debt,
given to usury, an usurer.
Mat. 18. 27.
,,

,
was conquered, for son of Belus, king of Libya,
ov, 6,
,,
they were overcome, II. o. 2. inf. Zx/xijvxi,

,/, ^,, ', ,


and brother of iEgyptus Axvxot,

,,
,
xi, the Grecian
to be slain or beaten, o. 522. part, the Greeks
subdued, slain, II. . 461. fut. women.
Ion.

,
in a reflex sense, that I might
subject myself to blows, might be overcome
by blows, Od. a. 54. aor. 2. pass, optat. Ix-

,,
II. . 564, that he might be subdued.

^,, ,^,
,
— wastefulness,

,
,
moneys expended, Ay. 8. 8.
'/}, expense

f. w&, I spend, waste —defray the


— cost — penalty
expenses, or

II.

for , by syncope from


pass. Zeo^ftYi/Acci, part,

.,., , ,
x. 2. plup.
p.

>

had been subjected by thee,


^^,,
overcome,
>/7... >
, Ion.
,
, *,
cost,

tion
Acts 21. 24.

—provisions,
and
ov,
Polyb.
, expenditure, consump-
9.
,
42. 4.
ov,
-
expensive,

,
were put under thy power, II. y. 183. aor. wasteful, sumptuous, Act. 2. 6. 2.
1. for they adv. at great expense, E. 6. 5. 4.

perat. ,,
, ,
were subdued or quelled, Pyth. 8.

, let him subdue himself, let


him comply, II. /. 158. part. over-
23. im- wastefully.

,,
soil, fr. hx,
ov, , pavement, ground,
Dor. for yij.
,^,, II. . 2.

come,

, ^,,
220.

,
.
. .

imp., 99.
reduces, quenches, Od.
sftecf&vei, overpowered, II.
.
.
Plut. 528.
, ^,
f.
a carpet, for

inf. poet,
tapes,

391.

,, - ,
, , pass. by
I tear
with fire,
with the teeth, devour
\\.. 183.
— consume
syne,

,
/, , ,
thyself,

,,
,^/, ,
,
and contr.

,
II. .
he subdued to

f.
1 99. imp.
himself, . 309. inf.
to be subdued, II. 3. 244.
poet, I shall
thou subduest to
for
ov,
blood-sucker, a
f.
and ov, 6, a devourer, a
Lye. 1403.
fly,

I devour, Od. sr. 315.

ov, 6, the son of Jupiter, and the


founder of the Trojan kings Axfixuihqg,
,
^,,
,
conquer, II. or. 438. aor. 1. for ov, a descendant of Dardanus

for

, ,
he subdued, aor. 1. m.

,
he subdued me to himself,
conquered me, II. . 278. aor. 1. pass, ox-
/,^,, for II. . 9, he was slain,
, oi, Dardanians, or the descendants of

Dardanus.

Alexander
ov, o, a Persian king conquered by
seaborn of Darius.

,,
part, broken down, 55. h*x- . ov, o, a Persian coin of the purest

,
subjects itself, in a reflex sense,
and therefore means to be brought, under
^-,
subjection by gentle means, is

brought under3 in a passive sense, and there-


gold, bearing upon it the image of Darius.
Its value, it is supposed, was the same with
the Attic or 20 silver drachms,
and about 11 shillings of our money. On
— — — — ——
285
the reverse of this coin was an archer, ,
, a festival celebrated by the
286

, , / ,
Persian king.
,
which gave occasion to Agesilaus to say
that he was driven out of Asia by thirty

, ,
thousand archers, meaning so many dareeks

-
distributed among the Greek cities by the
Boeotians in honour of Apollo ;
A. G. 296.
,
covered with laurel, Ion. 76.
,, — ,
see Rob.

greedy of
. . 23. . 538.

,
slaughter, stained with blood,
, -,

. ,, ,
— ), , or abundant, ample,

,
aor. 2. c.

Od. . 143. —vast


,, -,
f. I sleep, repose, profuse solitude, Lye. 957.
,,, .
, long-lived, Septem, 525.
a torch, Plut. 1042. fax,taeda. 14.
adverbially,
or
most profusely,
adv.
1. 6.

abun-

,
q,
ov, very shady, II. o. 273. Ix, dantly, profusely, At. 2. 7. 6.
202, , , division, II. . 166. distri- , ,abound,
abundance, profusion.

,
,
bution,

,
,
or
II. . 160.— a
to pay tribute,
tribute,
}> I am
and, moreover, also— but. The origin
profuse.

,
, ,.
decline,

-, , -
$ 3
to leave off paying a tribute,
from
f.

,, ,
, I divide, distribute.
i- e. of ? is the same with ts, and its primary

,
sense is therefore and. Atqsi-
xhtv, I wish to speak
;-
,
, ,
Dem.

, ^,^—
f.

or tribute
,
,
1355.

ing of taxes or tribute.


I
8.
distribution,
, a tax-gatherer
gather tribute, collect taxes,

,
..

q,
I
1. 23.

pay taxes
the collect-
of Atreides, and to sing of Cadmus,

temperance, and
this, ouhvx
h
. 1.2.
it
8, they teach the boys
greatly contributes to

. 1. 4.
— /.
26,you could

,
tribute, tributary,

,,
,
I
6,

pay
„ one who brings or pays
Herod. 6. 4s.
tribute,

. 8. 6. 2.

, fern.
see none whatever but
himself moreover with tears,
73, where Sturzius renders it byporro, iti-
dem, item. But in general marks oppo-
in tears, and Cyrus
see also page

,
6,

,
adj. striking with a torch.

2,

- ^,
or approaching in thick darkness,
an epithet of the furies, Theo. 2.
- sition, and its sense then is and or but,
and it supposes the particle
ceding clause,
in the pre-

.
14.

, , or dangerous to approach, Od. o. 234.

Od. f. 40.—
fix, v, thick, hairy, thickly set,
adv. thickly, shaggily— danger, ,
some things,
1. 2. 1, to

endure every labour, and to face every


other ,
,
,
with a rough breath, hence densus.

,
,
,
f.

Eccles. 66.
I thicken, render hairy. «-
I am made thick, become hairy,
things

,
for 7, §,
at the end of a noun means to
a place, opp. to

, , for
from a place,
home,
manifest,
11. a. 19.
Jl. .
.
466.

,
^,
shaggy, Theo.

,
,
, , , having a bushy
the fox, Theo.

,
112.

, thick-set with
,,
,
7.

5.
, , having thick wool.
q,
1

q,
5.
having thick hair, very

trees.
tail, scil.
while
I set, Theo.
, imp. ;, f. >?;, (the verb ha
1. 102. from

used impersonally, and implies obligation,


signifies fitness or propriety aris-
ing from use cr custom) it is binding it is

-,
necessary— it behoves, it is needful,

,
to bind,


;-

, hairy-footed, a hare.

,,
thick-bearded, Thesm. 33.
, thickness an aspirate. — )
it is

should be present,
necessary that they
] 2. 4. . (for hix
Anacr. 4, why is it
.

,
hi
I cut into parts, divide cut into — necessary that you should anoint a stone ?
shares, distribute, assign, Herod. 1. 216. Sometimes it governs the dative rather than
cut out the land, measure, parcel —
, ;, it behoved thee,

.
,
cut meat, the accusative, as
carve — cut a body, mangle, II. . 394. — cut E. 4. 1. 15. ; it becomes him,

,
down« dispute, decide,
-/; —
, ,
Septem, 717. 952.

,,
23.
, Dor.
,
/oc, 6,
,a
determine,Il.
distributor, awarder,

a laurel, Theo. 2.
a laurel-grove.
. 264. 3. 1.
should teach,

/
?//^
^,
. 3. 3. 10.
if it be fit that you

II. 3. 1. 15,
should be necessary for thee to bring them
aor. 1.

see lest it

,
,,
eating the laurel, Lye.
,
,, ,6, a prophet inspired by
6.
a shoot of the laurel.
made of
into a right mind still more than it was ne-
cessary to bring us. In the sense of there
is need, ;
,.
governs the genitive, fut.
61, there .
:, ,
y\, ov, 1. 6. 9.

will be need to thee of many things, thou

laurel, a laurel-bearer,
or ,:,
laurel, laurel branch, Call. 2. 1.

M.
crowned with
Supr». 714.
wilt
):
need many
ocwr/•",
things, aor.
:'.. 3. -1.
1. Mo\.
there would be
287

participle

).
tive,

need to thee of another


is used in the sense of the
battle.

,
The neuter
infini-
(for >)- ,,',
,
coward,
to sculk away,
c. 196. inf.
II.

,
. 190.
, setting
in the evening,
— —



288
to tremble,

,
2. 6. 29, I see that there is about late. the closing day the

,
—that
to be need

, .
of these things to thee evening sun, II. 232.

,
/7, , /-

,
thou about to stand in need of these an evening meal, supper
things,
art
hi or is often understood, - f. wa, I tarry until evening, stay to

/,
s.
or needful,
see also

,
1 5.

that there was no need, A. 6. 4. 1.5.


what is necessary, A. 4. 7. 5.

sure, Air. 4. 3. 8.
when needful, K. 6. 3.
beyond
24. part, hoi/,
they
shouted that there was nothing needful—

things
scil.

,. ,
necessity,
/;/, Acts 3.
it is

,
necessary

beyond mea-
in necessity,
, —, .
supper, Od. . 599.

for

pass. , ,
I receive, imper.
II. . 86, they entertained,

pledged with cups, for

aor.
show the way, direct exhibit, point out
show a thing unknown, discover, disclose
show evidence, prove, demonstrate— show

,*, .
1.
f.

I show,

necessary or needful, necessaries, i. e. . the principles of an art, teach, instruct


£<$, . things necessary — show an object to be pursued, propose, ap-

,
1. 6. 10.

to be done, duties, Aor. 1 . 2. 50. so point, determine deliver, II. —


1 70. /*- .
means a thing obligatory on a man, his
duty, .
2. 4. 3. for what is ne-
cessary, as is necessary or expedient, A.
, , I show myself/Wi?H<%
welcome, hospitably receive, II.

,,
196.
it is necessary to show, must show,
to a stranger,

—^

,
1. 3. 8. Asn 3. 5. 8.
2, , ,
, an exhibition, a specimen,
prayer, request,

,
/c, q,

,
supplication, want, Aves, 1058. Rom. 10. 1. proof or pledge, Eur. Supp. 354.— warning,
ov, to be supplicated, Plut. 8. 742. Jude7. aplacetoexhibitthingsin,Dem.932.
supplicatory, ... S. p. 178. f. , I exhibit, make a public

,/,, (from I bind, by reduplication


,, ,, ,,
show of— expose,leadin triumph, Col. 2.17.

, , ,,,
««) I bind with fear, I fear, an image, Lye. 1250.
fut.
spect,
he
II. .
fut. subj. lest

will feel dread,


116. fut. m. , for/
he should fear, re-

be afraid, U. v. 130. aor.


//,
htxviia,
were celebrated, Herod.
shows while the mysteries

demonstrative, adverbially htz-


ov,
2. 171.

I. /, for ?/, he feared, shud- Plut. 8. 977, to use for the


dered, 33. e. 623. optat. Mo\. //, purpose of expressing or demonstrating.
II. a.
,,,
.,
II.

, ,
might dread, II. r,. 456. p. a.
/<», by the same analogy as
becomes
a. 555.
.
. ; ou
I feel dread,
felotxi, c. ace.
.
am afraid,
who did not
/, another
for
02,


jj, a prostitute, brothel.

ov, timid, cowardly, cpp. to av-


sluggish, opp. to
oppressed with fear, wretched,
3. 7. 1.
4.2.21.

form of
,
dread or shrink from,
p. m. , poet, hilia, I feel /c*,
198.


a, ov, exceedingly fearful, very
wretched, Plutus, 974.
,
,, , ,
fear or anxiety for, I shrink fromII. z. 93. vj, timidity, cowardice, Ajax, 1033.

through fear or reverence, Od. . 168. - — a mean and slavish temper, opposed to the
//, they fear, II. 663. part, . manly spirit offreedom, servility, 2 Tim. 1.7.

,, , ,
plur. feeling fear, panic-struck, II. hihtaa, f. I sink through slavish fear,
. 24. imperat. contr. /#/, am timid, John 14. 27.
//

, ,',/, ^, ,
//#/, by sync, //?/, do thou fear, /oc, a, ov, timid, miserable, Call. 6. 101.
nor do thou fear even Mars, make afraid, terrify, Deut. 20. 8.
, /,
I
II. . 827. plur. do not fear, v. I am afraid, become timid.
366. imp. 1. plur. contr. evening— twilight morning
-/, 57,

^,
^ we dreaded.
by sync. /)?!/ about the

,
or evening,

, //,
,, , ,
so is for they feared, II. morning, very early, Herod. 8. 6. The day
y. 196. inf. ////, was divided into five parts, morning;

, , ,,, ,
fot$if&s»,

//<,
I feel fear,
,
f.
to fear, Od.

,
am
381.
6, timid, a coward,
.

alarmed, tremble, aor. 1. m.


to scare away, II. . 164.
Att.
II.

//^/,
. 56. i. e. about nine;
the hour of full market,

about three in the afternoon ;


evening.
noon;

ov, of evening, evening breeze.


the
/7,

,, ,
inf.
fut. jtijj hope not that I set, decline as the sun, Od. jj. 289.

you shall frighten me awa} , v. 201. impe-


r
IMA, (from , I fear,) fear, /,
rat. //, do not by any means consternation, II. . 681.
terrify the people, II. . 184. — (
, f.
.. am alarmed
, _ dread, t?*a?i- —
do not alarm me, scare me away as a I
sitively, Herod. 1. 159. 165
— —— — —— — — —— —— — —— — —
—— —

,, ,,,
289
,,,

,
,,',
6. 3.
Androm.
f.

42.
rumours, Choeph. 842.

alarm,
ov, o,
II. . 440.
,, ,
terror
panic-struck, timid.
I frighten, alarm, Herod.
I feel fear,
:,
am alarmed,

— the demon of fear


alarming

or
,entertain,
.
',
tuous
3. 3. 17.

Acharn. 1015.
Od.

ov, 6,
fo(7rvYiTYig, ov, 6,

,
. 535.•— make a meal, sup,

supper time, Od.


one who sups, a guest.
6, jj, fond of supper, sump-
— }>?, adv. sumptuously,
. 170.
290

Aiivoc, or hiv, gen.


/,
dat. fotpt, ace. , , one who provi-
ij,

who bore the


carries

,
felvoc, a certain person or thing whose name sion as, virgins

, ,,
is not known, or ivho is not worthy to be sacred banquet in honour of the Gods,
named, such a one, somebody, to hfou, see Ovid. Met. lib. 2. 711. Plut. 1. 48.

,1Q23. pen.

something a certain nameless part of the
human body, Acharn. 1148. see Dem.

, ov, c. ,, ,
,
/,
feared, from hog or htog, fear, and said of

,,
s. to be
,
jj, or

alog, ij, a neck


q, the neck, II.
y. 371.— neck of a hill, cliff, top, Olym. 3. 48.

track betweentwoseas, isthmus, Tsthm. 1.11.



a neck of land, a

a, ov, having many cliffs, Lye. 994.


a god to be feared, terrible, awful of a
king to be feared or obeyed, commanding,
,, , , ov, a cup with a long neck.
I cut the throat, Od. 349. .

,
authoritative, II. y. 172.— of a thing to be I skin, Herod. 2. 39.
feared, formidable, dangerous of a desire 6, , C. fearing
or passion to be feared, eager, vehement, demons, superstitious — religious, Acts 17.
sad, cruel of a talent to be feared, clever,
skilful, apt, Theo. Char. 1.
.
sad- <,
22.
,, %
foiail&ifiovojg,
I am
adv. superstitiously. fot-
religiously disposed
ness, danger ;
disasters,
/U, dangers, calamities,
Isivoig nvai, to be in circum-
stances of distress or danger, htvov
6, to regard a thing as sad, to feel indig-
- ,
, ,, , Polyb.
f. ma,
9. 19. 1.
an undue dread of de-
mons, superstition, Acts 25. 19. hwslai-
I am superstitiously struck,


, ,
nant hivov, adverbially, and adv. indecl. adjective, ten,

,,
severely, cruelly, terribly, acutely,
I am sad or miserable, Herod. 3. 152.
, -, teen
By , ten two, twelve
, fourteen
thir-
--

^
^,
11. 53.

Mosch. Ep.

ZzivoTYjg, virog,
ov,
to be greatly incensed, Luke

o, causing terror, maleficent,


8. Se&.
with indignation, 2 Mace. 4.35.
vj, vehemence
language or discourse, Luc. 2. 66. 211.

force of skill, ,
,
-,
,,,
^, ,
,, ,",,
,,
seventeen
nineteen
fifteen

ten, decemvir
decemvirate.

ov, 6,

ov, ten palms long, Hes. . 42 1

,
or
sixteen
eighteen
adv. ten times, decies.
a captain of
vj,

.
or

.
<Uf-

hivohoyeoficti, I feel an injury, Herod. I. 44.

,,
,
complainbitterly exaggerate —
a sad or terrible representation, exag-
geration, Polyb. 33. 5.
,
f.
6, , containing ten couches.

,
,
,,
a vast wave, Luc. 1 653.
I corrupt by giving a tenth
part, bribe, Plut. 9. 269. ov, 6, , .

,
,
offended
flicted
eg,


sadly affected, grievously
I am grievously af-
feel indignant, Dem. 1023. pen.
olog, cruel-footed, moving with

,
terrible steps, (Ed. T. 417.
bribery.

hzava'ia,
ov, 6, the ten commandments.
a, ov, or

,
months, ten months old, Theo. 24. 1.

.,,,
, a fleet of ten ships,
of ten ^•/,
.
f.

Thuc. 8. 74. perf. pass.


, ,,
^,
I render terrible, exaggerate,
is ren-
adv. ten times since, Equit. 1151.
ten cubits— ten ^,
,,
dered terrible,Long. 3. ter- feet long.
^',,^'7-^.,^~\.
rific representation, Plut. 4. 612. exagge-
ration.
',
§i^5i7rAuiff;i5i^w,maketen-fold, multiply byten.

,
, /,
, ,, ,,
Asf%tg,
,
fierce-looking, Hes. a. 250.
a show proof accusation
jj, —
a species of dance, Plut. 8. 976. fetza.

),
gen. contr. fear.
ro, supper, meal.

ov, containing ten plethra.

%,
-,
, ,,
hx
ground
alog,

is
, the number ten, decade,
in tens, decuriatim,
a period during which the
ov,
sown ten times, ~& ,
. 4. 5. 3.

,
f. >,
I sup, feast, eat, Luke 1 7. 8. in ten years, Troad. 20.
<%<? having supped f. gather, exact tithes, Dem.
— —

,
on this dinner, deferred dinner till
i. e. 617. 22. pay in tithes or tribute appro-
supper, and then taken it for supper, . priate for sacred purposes a tenth part of
1. 2. 11. my produce. to be tithed or
prepare a supper, pillaged, Polyb. 9. 39. .5.
U
, ,
—— —— — — — — — —— — —

,, -, ,
291 & 292

,
,
litary

,, ,
, , .
tithing or tenth part, Call. Ep. 14.
punishment by which one man in
every ten was put to death, Plut. 5. 172.

,
,
, , ,
on,
and

, , custom-house.
tenth , , ,-
,,

sc.
a
a mi- with dolphins, scil.
,
, o} v},bear\ngdo]phms
Thuc. 7. 41.
oi, a city of Phocis near Parnas-

sus, famous for the oracle of Apollo, and


so called from the Ar. ^hlD, telb, to seek or
inquire, which is the parent also of our
— armed

,
-
,

,,
,
or

,
,,, , ,
,
-
part, tithe, Aves, 922.

,,
,,
f.

-
lam
, , ,, , , a tenth
I

6,
sc.

exact tithes, Heb.


tithed, rendered tributary.
, a collector of
, carrying away the tenth
simply the tenth part, Call, in Del. 278.
7. 6.

tithes.
part,
delve
a man or

of
ther,
and

,,
affiliating
Dem.
f.
dive

,,
,

woman of Delphi-— Delphian
of Delphi, Delphic
ov,
a temple of Apollo

645. 15.
aor. 1.

,,,
land

the act
a child on the part of a mo-



f.yaa,

, ,, , , ,,, ,
oi, ten thousand, II. g. 860. by sync. build, raise,

Romim , ,
ov, containing ten asses, scil. the
p.
construct, Od.
we
192. .
I

for

, , , ,', ,,
denarius. will build, let us build, II. n. 337.
Ion. for Decelea, a town aor. 1. I built, II. . 446. — m. hi-
of Attica o<j, sc. the for he built for himself, Od.
Decelic war, or the last part of the Pelo- . 8. aor. 2. I built had
ponnesian war. been built, v. 683. part, built,
};, , , II. . 249.

^,
,', ,
ten years old, Lysist. 643.

,
ten years long,
An dr. 306. decennial, Agath. 6'.

like.
, indecl. a body, structure
sub.
,,
in the
— form
form of

,
,
oars,

. ", ,
;,

248.
,
,,

,,
,,
furnished with ten banks of
Polyb. 16. 1.

,,. ,
6,
receive, Herod.
one who receives, a beggar, Od.
ov —
1. 107.

a, ov, fit
fire, like

44,
(
fire,

I roll,
II.

bedstead, a bed, couch, Od. . 300. —


, a bond, chain, from .
. 1.

a sort of cake, Anthol. 1. 478.


turn my eyes upon, beckon,
a
nest.

,
~/i,

,
to receive, susceptible, Plut. 9. 492. II. . 180.
, , also ,,
,,,
-,,
, .. ,
received, acceptable, Luke 4. 24.

,
, a receiver, approver, Eum. 199.
ten fathoms long,
a tree
abounding with ,
, , a small tree.
trees,

, , , , ,
a bait, decoy, 2. 1.4. woody, Tlieo. 25. 30.
,
, ,
I catch with a bait, ensnare, like a tree.

, 14,—,
f.

,
,Jam. 1.

*, ,
/,

the letter
a bait.
pudendum mulicbre.
ij, a tablet, a record, Long. 4.

,, a small tablet, a decree.


dian of trees
climb
I

,
become a
6, Luc. 2.

up
tree, grow with
332, Bacchus as guar-
,, wood Mac.
trees,
nymph.
Antiph.
.
trees.

2.

,
,, , f.
ov, a recorder written on a ta-
blet, deeply engraved onthemind, Eum. 275.
I write on a tablet, record—
I have a thing written on my

and fruits,
, shaded with
,
Eum.
, sj,

of a blast which strips trees of their leaves


941.
leaves,
hurtful to trees, said

,.

,, ,
memory as on a tablet, distinctly remem- down

2,,
,ber,

,
M. Supp.
,, 1

r„
94.
the matrix, a womb. shear, Pax, 746.
I
I
cut
fell

. a tree,
trees, A?r. 2. 1. 13.
fell hair, mow,

:,
litter

,, ,
sucking pig.
6, a young pig.
of young pigs

I breed as a sow, Acharn. 786.


a
a ,,
,
, /, , woody,
, , reproach, Herod. 107.
utter reproaches, Ajax, 242.
I

, a receiving
q,
119.— a
Hec. F. 790.

vessel,
recipient, matter.
9.

cistern,

,
q, a dolphin, a sea fish, Herod.
said to resemble a pig, and remarkable for
swiftness, intelligence, and friendliness to
302,
-,
6.
right, opp. to
a, ov, c. -,
expert in the use of the right
left,
man, .
22. — an iron or leaden instru- —
hand clever, dexterous—flyiug on theright

,
II.

,
,
ment, (so called from its resemblance to a
dolphin) which when thrown on board an
enemy's ship caused it to sink.
dive like a dolphin, Luc. 2. 328.
;-/,
the shape of a dolphin
of a dolphin, having
/em. ,,
side, auspicious, II. v. 821.

,
—,
£77/

,,
,
verbially, most dexterously

for ,
ad-

to the right side, namely, the east.


to the right wing
adv. dexterously,
happily endued by nature—
— far/

, -,
sc.

adj. dolphin-like tabic,


feet
Luc.
were made
2. 832,
in
i. e. a table whose

the shape of a dolphin, ,, ,


sc.
'.), the right hand.
receiving sheep for slaughter,
opulent by means of victims, Andr. 129,
— —— — —— —— — — —a

,
.

2.93

", ,
,
2
, , 294

limbs, nimble,


6, ij,

Olym.
alert in the use of one's

, a spearman, Acts 23. 23.


I receive with my
9. 164. yviou.
W,ao0yA#£,a%o.c,o,keeper,gaoler,Actsl6.23.
,
Mat. 23.

,
6, a prisoner, bound, Ajax, 105.

,
or
4.

,
Luke 8.
I bind, chain, imprison,
28.

-,
right hand, courteously entertain, salute-

,, , ,
bid farewell, embrace,

^,
^,
welcome,
8. 7. 3.

gold, the fairest object


of salutation to men.

^,,, , pledging as in drinking.


, q, the shaft horse on the
Ajax, 234..
ace.

up, prison, Mat. 11. 2.


,
, chained, captive,
a place for persons bound

,
,

,
f.
,,
,
,

I have power over, rule,


domineer, sway, Trach. 367. Prom. 208.

, },,
, one who has absolute power

,
right side, An tig. 144. in a state, a sovereign, despot, lord, John

&,,, , ^, , dexterity, Ran. 1041. 5. 8. in a family, opp. to



,
ov, receiving fire, E. Supp. 63. master, husband lord, opp. to a
.—
,, m a, right, for slave, 1 Tim. 6.

-
one who has absolute

,
ov,

^, ,
,,
,, .,
.
, ,
the right hand,
reception,
82, we will receive
Iphig.
thee with that reception, i. e. give thee

,,
that reception.

inf. (the pass, form of


.

to bind)
1 1
II. 284.

, »,
aor. 1.
sc.

,
power over goods, owner, author, 2 Tim. 2.2 1

,
, — ",
, -
f. no , I rule, am master of.

am directed, subjectto,Heracl. 884.


,,
absolute power, tyranny.

queen, lady, Od. y. 403.


, ov,
), a mistress,

a, ov, of despots
,
I am bound with necessity or want, I want, or kings, .
7. 5. 23. fit or disposed to—
,
,
,,,, ,, ,,
need

^, ,
or

,,
beseech.

the neck
Ion. 1431.
fear, II. .
a cup, Theo. 1. 55.
a necklace,
376.

,
,
rule,

2.
despotic, lordly,
adv. as it befits a lord or master, in a
despotic or tyrannical manner.
, ov, of a lord or master, O. 1 4.
,,
Hecub. 1294, tasks
0. 13. 5.

,noose, snare.
,
f.

, >, ., , —
p. , ,,
\, fetters for the neck,

aor. 2.
a

I
",
imposed on us by our oppressors.
,,
mistress, Iphig. T. 439.
sovereignty, sc. —

,
see, behold look, reflect, intransitively, bound bundles,

,
I n, ov, at,

,II. .
eyes, see
95.
446, looking,
- Olym.
i. e.
1.
flashing fire
152.
Od. .
from his
Ion.
faggots,
or
553.
II. .
adv. to this place, hither
in this place, here, II. a. 153. It seems ori-

,
I see, have the use of my eyes, ginally to have been a verb in the imperative,
— >
«/, ,
e. live, II. a. 88. and is occasionally used so still, come,
i.

, inspect, cast favoura-

", , ,
, , ,
,
ble looks upon, Pyth.

verbially, (%,§,) ,
§
like, for
aspect,
3. 151.
look— ad-
Med.
come forth.
adv. the imperative of or
come, hasten, Mat.4.19.
§,
)
,— ,
185.

pass,
f.

, , aor. 1.
take off the skin, flay
I
aor. 2. second — second
subordinate, II. 2. 3. 3.
a, ov,
in
(for
rank or degree, inferior,
second in time, —
from

,,
, , , , ,:, , ,,
whip, am

skin, felt, hide


garment

,,
I have my
skin taken away with a
scourged, Vesp. 483.

n, ov,
,

a leathern
made of skin,
,
posterior, succeeding

,
perlative
II. r. 51.
neut. plur.
secondly, in the second place, again,
a second time, John 3. 4. Hence the su-

, n, ov, the last,


about the
lowest,
last

,leathern, Mat. 3. 4.

02,
,,
,
,
.
a hide, skin, Philoct. 491.
the coat of fat investing the
bowels, caul, Od.
—, , ,,
course of a feast
,
part in a drama, a second, Luc.
6,

on the second day, Acts


adv. secondly.
one who acts a second
3. 357.

,
578. a, ov,
, —
,, , (, to bind)
6 , 28. 13. the second prize,,
), ,
,
any thing to fasten place or rank, Lye. 1011. Herod. 1. 31.
with, a fastener— fastener of the feet, fet- f. I act the second part, am
ters —
fastener of the hands, handcuff— fast- second, Eccles. 630. Polyb. 18. 38.
ener of the body, chains, prison, bonds
fastener of the head, caul, fillet —
,
a second law, recapitula-
.
,
fastener tion of the law, deuteronomy.

,of the tongue, impediment, Mark 7. 35.


,
% bundle, Mat. 13. 30.
,
6, , bound, Philoct. 617. a per-

son bound, a captive, prisoner.


, f. ,
ov, the first sabbath after the

second day of the passover, Luke 6. 1.


I moisten, soak,
he watered, II. -. 220.
for
for
U 2
,, ,,
29

,
with milk, fill, II. . 471.

bathed, II. -. 15.


they wetted, bathed, 0d. . 260. moisten



moisten with
blood, stain, dye, I am moistened, soaked,
— ,
,
,
f. haa, or I tie
bind, confine, Luke 13. 16.

imp. htKavoavTo, for

,
they received, pledged him, II. o. 86.
tie with a cord,
tie by a law,


- 296

,, f. hvnaa, I take in moisture as a thing

that is soaked, I thirst for, want,


it wanted but little, Od. /. 483.
join, Rom.
oblige, compel.
~, f. hipa, I
7. 2.

,
Mat. 16. 19.

,
am bound with want,
ueby force,

I want,

,
II. . 15. —
I am moistened, bathed,

, , ,,
feel thirst, want, imp. ovh
c. gen. nor did their appetite

at all want, it was fully appeased, II. a. 468.


need, aor. 1.
•II.

am
. 100. — am
ha, I
for he needed,
absent, away or far from.
am altogether away from,
very far from, Prom. 1005. ha ,
-
inf.
of battle, to be behindhand in the battle,
i.e. to require aid. part,

, ,
of life, II. v. 471. tut. inf.
we are about to want or need, that we
,
IL v. 310, to be short

deprived
that

, ,,
,
say, I
hav
veting, so far
I
I want little of becoming,

am in
had almost
wanting so much of co-
from coveting, ha
want, am short, of little to
said, uSschin. c. Ctes.
am bound— bound
%.
-

,- ,,
shall be deficient in, II. v. 786. pres. optat. I by ne-
for hvoivTo, they would want, cessity, I want, need, c. gen.
would be without, II. . 128. pres. ind. . 13. 8, he receives some of
hvsat scil. things he wants, pres. subj. hvi-

,
in all other things thou art short of, infe-

, whatever things may be wanting or

,
rior to, the Greeks, II. -. 484. needful, IT. 6. 2. 11. imp.
.
f. fo -, I chafe the skin, flay,

, 2. 4. 4, they got up or re-


moved where each had

,
need. fut. ovhv h-

,
Equit. 24.
.
or rubbing, Od.

,,, .
truce,

receive
Thuc.


ov,

10. 2.
5. 32. hx,a,
Ion.
.
48.

h
,.
htpsa, I soften or render pliant by handling

, having ten knots,

-,
ov, ten days'

I take to myself,
receive favour, accept receive —
, aor. 1.

pres. inf.

sary,
there will be no need,

.
\»,
inf.
hyuvivai, the thing wanted, 2. 4. 41.

wanted, before they are wanted or neces-


2. 1. 30. —
10. 1.
to be wanted.

before their being

ask, beseech in conse-


quence of wanting, II. 1.4. 12. Oammwith
the contents, contain, Acts 3. 21. receive — some 'probability takes to be another
information, learn —
receive an attack, sus- form ofhoy.ai.
tain, wait, watch —
receive evidence, admit AI±,indeed, assuredly, sane, profecto pray. —
, ,

,, regard, bear with, 2 Cor. 1J. 16. hxov-

, , ,,
imp.
Olym.
they receive, entertain,

2. 88. accepted,
for

,,
II. .
Nem. 5. 71.
he received,
420. imperat.
But it seems to be the imperative of laa,
to learn, ,
contr. >7, learn, observe,
and this is its primary sense. Homer hav-
ing stated the evils which the anger of

, ,,-
ceive,

,, , ,?,
II. r.

,
346. part,

794.
for
Olym.

Thus
or
4. 14.
10, perf. imper.

also imp.
by sync.

by sync.
receiving, waiting, watching,
do thou
take thou,
receive,

becomes
II.

II.
re-

.
.
Achilles had caused to the Greeks, to pre-
vent the reader from concluding that he
was an enemy to his countrymen, or de-
lighted in their destruction, adds, e| ov Iyi,
&c. from that time observe then and not
till then, >? ,,

,
hxovaiv
Od. /. 513, I entertained, and the
.
,
inf.
though
infin. f.

9. 97. aor. 1.
ceived, Od.
this may be
will
m. h^aTo,
.
to receive,
for

,
II.

take to himself, Pyth.


for he re-
113. imper. h^ai, receive
a. 23.
perf.
1. 1. 2, whence observe whence in-
deed—they seem to me to have principally
accused him for having introduced new
gods. It usually succeeds adverbs of time,
place, &c. with a view to render their

,, ,
thou, take,
,,
",
238. perf. pass.
II. s. 227. paulo post fut. hh-

I will firmly or instantly sustain, ?.

they received, sustained,


...,
for h-
147. ..
meaning prominent and emphatic; as

,,,
\ ,^,
«, thenindeed.

/
adv. from
seeDamm.412. .
>?

and ?, there-
— —)


also
plup. for
.
,,
they entertained, Od. vj. 72.
he received,
fore, then, Eur. Elect. 274. igitur that is

, ,
to say, nimirum, IT. 4. 6. 2. namely, scili-

,
took hold of, . 224. also they cet, Prom. 202. for from the

,,pledged, /. 667.

,. —from
part, receiving, saluting, Od. o. -foundation, Septem, 249.
has the same sense with }iyv, diu, long,
150.
also
the form

tained, pledged him, Od. c. 1 20.


hence
imp. hthiox.~To, he enter- },. ,
II.

p.
435. . 104.
f. I prolong
278. part, hfivvav, tarrying,
my stay, delay,
II. a. 27.
Od.
—— — — — — — — — — —
297
02, , ,
,, .
hostile, furious,
raging, flaming, of
II. . 481. . 533. seela'iog.

taken by an enemy, plundered,


an enemy,

, , borough—
the people, «. 170.
from the people, one of

, one who leads the people,


298

,,
ov, ov,

~,
Septem, 72. an orator, a demagogue, a patriot, E. 5. 2. 3.
,
,
ijroc, v\, hostility, fury, battle, U. y. f. I lead the people, attach
20. —the din of war. . onio- the people to myself— flatter, cajole, Dem.
), 348, from war and its terrific 98. 10.

,
II. e.

,din, i. from the desolating fury of war.


e.
or /oa, f. —
I ravage with
— rout,
*>
*/*/,
,
popular ffr/s, Equit. 217.
vj, ov,
a leading of the people,
ij,

,
,
hostile

, , ,,, —, ,
pierce, slay,
f.

or
fire, desolate
II.

|a, I bite
bitten
. 452; . 566.
a bite.
biting, morti-
II. . 416.—

,^, ,

^,
the arts of misleading them, Polyb. 38. 3.
government of the people, Equit. 191.
ov, ,
a little people, Equit. 823.
ov, 6, a tribune of the people, a

, ,,
fying to the heart, Agam. 1482.
ov, v\, ov,

,
having power
to bite, keen, reproachful, Hec. 235.

waste
f.

— injure the body,


I injure — injure the fruits,
wound
^,
— injure an ,
prefect of a borough, Nub. 37.
f. ,,
rongh—
I am a tribune— preside over a bo-

a borough, tribuneship.
f. ,
,
), the presidency of

I publish for sale the goods of


oath,
prove

,,
,
hence

,
struction,
deleo.

Od.
y. 107.
-violate, II.
injurious or destructive,

— /,
.
,
286. Herod. 1. 41.
II. f.

injury, hurt, de-


will
102.

,
/,, ,

,
a proscribed person, confiscate, Thuc. 5.
60. —
vest in the people, Cycl. 119.

ov,
), confiscation,
addressed to the people, de-
clamatory, M. Supp. 631. a popular ora- —
proscription.

/,
,
,
>}>?>7£,
a,
a destroyer, pest, Od. . 84.
6, a destroyer, #. 416. fiend.

ov, pernicious, deleterious.


(probably a corruption of §), ,
,,
f. ,
tor, declaimer, E. 6. 2. 27.
I harangue, address the
people, Acts 12. 21. Asr. 3. 6. 1.


,
.
), the art of speaking in public

,,
Theo. 5. 27.
I wish, prefer, haranguing, oratory, 4. 6. 14.
,
;, an island in the Mgean sea, , ov, declamatory, oratorical.
and the birthplace of Apollo and Diana. popular harangues, Att.

,
A-ffAiog,

02,
a, ov, of Delos, Delian—
a woman of Delos the name of the
ship annually sent from Athens to Delos;
the deputies were called
ov, manifest, clear, distinct.
English it must often be rendered adver-
bially, }?
In

being grieved ,
, —
.
^-',
4. 2. 3.

, , ,'.
pular vote,
f.

or
M.
Supp. 7.
by the people, po-
a, ov, exiled

I court the people, rank with,


am devoted to them, Vespae, 697.
ov, a mechanic of
vulgar artist, Polyb. 10. 8. a planner or —
he was manifest, he was manifestly grieved, maker, Heb. 11. 10. a worker for the —
. 2. 2. 1.
plain, you plainly seek.
),
seeking you are
, - people or community, which was the real
character of a magistrate or minister of

,~( ^
, ) , ,,
X.02V, he is clear that he has heard, he has state, Dem. 280. 3; and this is its sense in
^,
,,
clearly heard — ciijAoy -,
or simply Od. o. 383. yao \n
it is plain things manifest, signs, >, scil.

proofs
assuredly, yes, that
o~7p\a,

0/;>7, adv.
is
o/iAce.

to say
on, manifestly,
or
/
,
) \ *•#' $£-
/?./, surely, because, forsooth — that aoihov, i. e. for

. ^,
isto say, scilicet, nimirum. It may be taken what person indeed himself having come
separately, it is manifest that, from elsewhere, e. himself a stranger,
i.

22". what person except one of those who


I say,
>?,

,
f.

^,
), I make
plain, signify, Polyb. 6. 26. reveal,
, ,, ,,
manifest, show, ex-
1 Cor. 3.
are magistrates, (that is men of authority)
can invite a stranger (to a civic feast)
and he can only invite a seer, a healer of

,
13. ), manifestation, display.
:,
or — , evils (a physician), an artist, a divine bard

,
vj,

Ceres, the goddess of corn, the poetic name who delights by his song.
of corn, supposed to be for mo- f. >jr7<y, I work as a mechanic, A.

ther earth.
02, E. a. 3.
,,
I was wrought, Luc,

,
a people, community, II.
ov, 6, . 1. 98. workman-
— common
547. people, or common sol- ship, or a piece of work r
diers, opp. to qy£f&w~* public^ opp. to ov, skilled in working or planning ~-h
— —
to .?—
assembly of the people the vulgar, opp.
power of the people, a popu-
lar government, democracy, E. 2. 3. 17.
a planner.
7,,
adv. artist-like, with the

confiscated, Equit. 1 03. .


skill of
— — — — — — — —

, ,,
290 A U I A 300

,
opp. to
259.
ov, of the people, public, common,

scil.
— ,
Od. y. 82. popular, Od. .
they drink
wines supplied by the public, II. . 250.
the public weal, -. Supp. 382.—
,
JEschin.
yivvxiog'

^,
c. Ctes. §
^,, /.— plebeian,
opp. to
with more
regard to the people, more liberally, Luc.
3. 404. adv. friendly to the
people, humanely, Dem. 1308.

^,
an executioner.

i. e.
ov, o, a people-devouring king,
destroying them as a wolf, and not ,
,I become a
registered among a people,
Dem. 1092.
citizen,
a vulgar woman, Theo. 28. 22.
ihog,

,
protecting them as a shepherd, II. x. 231. ov, 6, , a president or guardian of
/,
-/,,
d^oy^aj/, a senator, II. y. 149.
ov, enforced by the people. >5-
a curse of the people, who

,, , ,
'/,
the people, (Ed. C. 1348. e%a.

,,-,
ov, 6, a devourer of his people.
ov, 6, a flattering artful dema-

,
have power to punish the object of it, gogue, Hec. 1 32.

^,
Agam. 468. some read
executed by the people.
ov,
^\,,,,,
, 5j,
vulgar, ordinary, Luc. 1. 840.
useful to the people.

cles. 940.
I live under a popular go-
vernment, enjoy a free government, Ec-
,,/},
whose supreme power is vested in the
a state Aw,
f. I divulge, Isthm. 8. 18.
,
tx, patriotic songs, ballads.
adv. long, a long while

permanent glory, Theo. 16. 54.
ov r , ,

,, ,
long-lived

,,, ,
,
people, A0. 3. 1. aged, Prom. 800. fixed stars, An tip. Sid. 49.

. ,
, a popular form of govern- plur. designs, machina-
ment, a constitution in which the power
of the state is vested in the people, a re-
public, democracy, opp. to
,
ov, democratical, adverbially,
tions, Od. . 289.

,
ov, denarium, a silver coin equal to
about l\d. of our money, Mat. 18. 28.
,, biting ov,
*

biting

,
,, ,
,
like a friend to the people, Ranae, 983.
^,-^, ov,
stoned, Antig. 36.

-,
effected by being publicly
to aim at.
aping the people, Ranae, 1117.
ov, made one of the citizens.
on, decreed by the people.

, ,
,
scattered by the people.
1-., ov, fat, II. L 240. Heb.
the mind, heart-piercingj^ozt-er, Agam. 751.
meaning a flower that awakes the heart of

-,
the beholder and stings it when reached.

3. 2. 12.
tences,
why

,
adv. ever,

,
It is
;.
unquam, at any time,
used in interrogative sen-

did he ever praise ? It is also rendered


in Latin by tandem, demum cumque.
.
3. 2. 2,

,
blood, Zyi-

,
which Plato calls food of the body, i. e. John 5. 4, with
fat. see Long. 32. 5. whatever disease he was at any time op-
,
,
4. 36. public.
ov, belonging to the people col-

,:
lectively, for the use of the republic, E. 7.
conjunctures
pressed.
^yittov,
forte, II. .
adv. by chance, indeed, sane,
736. —
truly, forsooth. It is ren-

,,
;,,
,
,,
, ,
,
^,, ,-
of the public, the public interest. What is
common to all, and yet free to be used by

.
each individual, is called what be-
longs to the whole, and used by the whole
collectively, is

^.
the
dered by vero,
and

.
in answering,

158. —
or
liriQia,
forte, in asking questions,

,
by vero, nimirum.
contention, conflict,
f.

I fight,
),
combat, Olym.
Od. .

I!.

,
public treasury, sc. the public bu- for

,
16. 63. 37,

", , —
they quarrelled contend, II. . 734.

—, , ,
siness, SC.

,
,
— ,
ov, 6, a public man, a servant of
the public, a notary
decree, sc.
expense, sc.
or
a public
— public
public place, sc.%w^s«. gods.
a, ov, Dor.
adverbially, a long time.
Dor.
long, II. . 206.

long-lived, immortal

, I confiscate, E. 1. 7. 6.
physic among the public, Acharn. 1029.
I make common, prostitute.
,,

practise Atjtx has simply the sense of >?

,,
defrayed by the people
public procession, Luc. 2.440.
pray,

,
' §
what is this place, pray ?
(fut. of ,
to learn,
;
indeed
(Ed. C. 53,
no indeed.
by sync.
•/,) I will learn or discover by learning,
,,
, .

,,
I offer sacrifice at the public expense,
Dem. 531. 24.
ov, o, one of the people, At. 1. 2.
find, Od. . 114. hence
who invented corn, Ceres.
the goddess

a prep, governing the genitive and the



58.
.
',

2. 3. 6.
Dem. 314. 3.
plebeians, and not privileged,
members of a corporation,

,, disposedto favour the people,


patriotic, republican in a good sense, see
,
accusative, meaning medium or the end
through, on account of.
John 1. 3,

through him, by means of him.


-, by whom ye were called,
It
all things were made
/
I
ov ~-
Cor. 1.9.
— — — —

, ,
,
301 I A 302
ha Lukeby means of pa-
8. 4, ov, o, a calumniator, a false accuser,

/ ,,
rables, through the medium of parables.
to hold by means of the
/ -^
John 6.
false accuser,
70. — Satan in the character of a

/^,.
hence devil, Mat. 4. 1. -
,
hand, have in hand, 4. 27, do not
Hercd. 7. 30, a river give place or occasion to the accuser or
appearing through five stadia, at the distance informer.
of five stadia, five stadia off. /
, ,
, q3 malicious, slanderous— /-

,,
treog, 1 62, through eleven years, through
.

the interval of eleven years, after eleven


/ -, ,
6. 15.

,,
adv. maliciously, insidiously, Thuc.

,
years, through the day, during f. I carry across, carry
the day. ha through the third through or over, Luc. 3. 413.

,
,
year, in the third year ; every third year, I maintain against, assert,
/ to be through fear, to enforce in opposition to those who affirmed

,
2. 4.

59. ti ,
be by means of fear, to be in fear, Thuc. 6.
5. 29, to hold one
-
the contrary, 1 Tit. 3. 8. Dem. 220. 4.
I force, urge strenuously.

,
by means of anger, to hold in anger, /'

,
I convey, force over, cause to
Iphig. .
1000, to have the pass, Herod. 1. 25. A. 3. 5. 5.
eye in shame, to look ashamed, ha

,
I eat, corrode through.

/
,
,(Ed. T. 792, having passed
through such plight, being in such plight,

in fear, Orest. 750.

,
I come through fear, am

passing through the tongue, not being on


/
tov, not

the tongue, not being expressed, Eur. Supp.


/
/,
,
,
,,
. life,
ov, eating through, rankling idcer,
Philoct. 7.

3. see

f.

eaten through, Tracli. 689.

.
I live throughout, spend my whole

put buds through, shoot forth.


,
I see through, see tho-

,
112. through speed, with speed, roughly or distinctly, look across, ha-
/ —

,
Thuc. 2. 18. ha or through then thou shalt clearly see see

, ,
every part, every where. without Mat. 7. 5.
film,

/,
through envy, because of envy, Mat. 27. f. I shout so as to be heard
/
,
18.

,
of your traditions,
15. 6, by means

the sake of the gospel, 1 Cor. 9. 23.


for
/ brated, Luc. 1. 463.

throughout proclaim, Persae, 640. ha-
I have been talked of, am cele-

,
on this account, for this reason, ov, talked throughout, celebrated.
Rom.

",
^-,
^, ,
,—
against,

pose
1.

, ,
26.
In composition ha has usually the sense of

, ,
apart thoroughly, throughout
in opposition, as in

in politics.
for
against,

walk through, go across,


I
I

I protest
contend against.
I op-
Elect. 503.
ov, soaked, drenched, Thuc. 7.

12.— plunged, Luc. 2. 522.— bathed, E.

f.

across, cause to pass,

I
Ion.
I stuff
for
thoroughly with.

Herod.
become serene, Equit. 646.
I
carry news from one party to
4. 71.
I convey

2,
, ,,
pass, Aves, 287.
,
ov,
5j,
I

a crossing
passable

pass over, Luke 16. 26. step with one foot
at a distance from the other, so as to have

2,
a more firm position, It. 1.14. see

)-
, , , ,, - walk
. ,.
,,
across, traverse,

— passage.a,ov, to

,
another
Rom.

persist

9. 17.
proclaim abroad, A. 3. 4/22.

I
announce, Acts 2]. 26.
I deride, mock, A. 2. 6. 13.
distinguish by tasting.

— interpose, Dem. 541.


(see

the sabbath being spent


I
10.
continue,

be passed. necessary to pass, through, being past, Mark 16. 1.

,
it is
must cross, A. 2. 4. 3. it is born to be, it naturally

,
/»«

,
ov, a title of Jupiter as giving becomes, or is disposed by nature, Plut. 8.

, ,, —
, )
to travellers a favourable passage lta£a- 217.— intervene, 1. 128. continue with-

,
sacrifices or vows offered for out intermission, Polyb. 2. 19. aor. 2. m.
a favourable passage, Thuc. 5. 54. Thuc.

,
5.
,
a pair of compasses, Nub. 177. 16, having injured the state in nothing,

)
he
(see I pierce through continued throughout — he passed through
— pierce with reproaches, calumniate dart — without injuring the
life state.
through or across, Herod. 5. 34. surpass — (see I acquire a tho-

,
— abuse,9. 116.
, ,
defrauds, Aves, 1647. aor. 1. pass. hs&r,0n
who was accused to him, Luke 16. 1.
;,
accusation, A. 2. 5. 2.
, ',
he traduces,

calumny, false , ,
rough knowledge between one thing and
another, distinguish, discern, know, II. \l.
470. — determine,
, h,
x\cts 24. 22.

decision, Acts 25. 21. Hipp. 926. discern»


,, decree,
—— — — — —

,
303
ment, distinction

,
pable of distinguishing, discriminating.

,
^,
^,
I launch a
javelin, by putting the hand in a loop called
, , ca- ', ^^
,^,~,
A
do not overlook them have escaped, do
,
I

Herod. 8. 75,

not suffer them to escape, through your

,
neglect for
A

may
/^//,
304

,
A. 4. 3. 21. Luc. 2. 637. escape, fut. of
f.

parate cavity, aor. 1. part.


,
I form a distinct or- se-
^\•/ ,
they will slip asunder, escape, 8. 60.
Herod. 8. 75, 1 give asunder,
having dug or excavated, Od. . 438.
)

distribute —
disseminate, 4. 2. 5. put in .

,
I make known, Luke 2. 17. one place after another, change the position

^, , murmur against, Luke 15.


-), I describe, delineate, set
f.

down as base, Eur. Elect. 1072. cancel, —


1. of the limbs, as a person weary, Troad. 117.
—plunder, Luke
, ,, 11. 22.
distribution, series.

, ^, , ,,
expunge, Dem. 50 1 20. arrange the army,
marshal, settle their respective rank or po-
. — f.

judgements to different
I administer justice, issue
parties,
. determine
4.—

,
sition, Polyb. 6. 12. for, settle, decide between, 3. /ei-

,, to, a de- receive judgement, have my


I
scription, copy, transcript —a figure, dia- cause tried or decided, E.5.3.10.Dem. 364.8.
— scheme — edict, Polyb. 23. 10. — the , —

,
gram law-suit, trial a question in
paymentor cancellingofa debt, Polyb.32. 1 3. which was discussed the right of prece-

, , )—
I am watchful, Luke 9. 32. dence or superiority of rank, iEschin. c.

,,
I watch throughout, Ran. 962. Ctes. -.

, , ^,
,
(see
convey across I spend, E.
1 Tim. 2. 2. where —
I lead through, conduct

/,
or
7. 2. 12. live,
I drive the chariot across, i. e.
asunder from the right path, Orest. 993.
I assert, justify, Thuc. 4. 106.

,
,
is understood, Dem. 143. 8. aor. I distinguish good from bad
2. he tore asunder, distracted. money, prove, O. 19. 16.
Dem. 675. 11. fight with spears in hand,
, , a mode of life— pastime. Polyb. 5. 84. combat with arms, Long. 13.
,,a fare, freight, porterage. \,, aor. 2. I run, fly here

,
contend throughout or to
I and there, as the clouds across the sky

,the end — combat an enemy dispute with — traverse run over with the eye, survey,

,
a rival, Ranae, 806. Theo. 25. 233.

^,
Plut. 7. 96.

),
,
having sustained a hard

I distribute,
I bite,
I
Herod. 8.
conflict,

121.
pierce through, II. e. 858.
divide for myself, appropri-
,
sternation
K. 10. 8.

',
,
, running here and there, con-

,

a cross passage, or walk across,

, 5j, running here and there,


disorderly flight, Septem, 193. 350.

,
^,
,
,
ate, II. s. 158.
aor.
monstrate, Herod. 8. 118.

, ,
1.

on the right, lucky, tiiafo&ou


regarding it as an auspicious
I show plainly, de-
^, ", see
,
6, one who shrinks from

the duties of a citizen, Ranee, 1014.


, I pass through
pass through a ivall, enter, penetrate, Theo.
3. 14.

pass through a to?*rent,v/ ade pass —

,
,,
thing, Herod. 7. 180. through dangers, escape, evade, Dem. 271.

,
aor. 2. I see through, 18. pass through difficulties, surmount
discern, II. |.

, tied across,
344.

to the head, a royal crown, a diadem.


,
a riband binding a tiara

\ come in the place of an-


Septem, 124.

,
-%,
-,
,
break through the enemy, E. 7. 2. 3.
^^, ,
~(>, escape, subterfuge, Dem. 730.
distribute gifts, 3. 3, 5.
I see through, discern.
shows itself distinctly, is conspi-

.

,
other, succeed, A. 1. 5. 2. Trach. 30. I re- . 277. put to a trial, II. u. 535.

}>, ,
ceive by right of succession, Acts 7. 45.
cuous, II.

m. }>, I sing against,

,
f.

, ,
6, , received in succession, contend with in Theo.
}>, singing, 5. 22.
com-

,
hereditary, Ion. 478. to converse,

,
inf.

,
,, , , succession, Eur. Supp. 406.
6, a successor, substitute, alle-
mune together, Od.

. 215.
I live by means

^, ,
viator, Prom. 464.
. of, —
maintain continue to the end of life,

',,) , ,
quite manifest, 4. 4. 1. Iphig. A. 923. Apoll. I. 1074.

Theo. 24. 83.


I tear asunder, injure greatly,

(see
Od. |. 37.
I run away, es- ^,,
I separate, sever those under
the same yoke, A. 4. 2. 7.
,
, &, ,
separation from the same
cape by flight, Acharn. 601. part, yoke.
aor. 2. of having escaped, - , 6, disunion, separation.
— — — — —— —

,
,305

,,, . , I
I examine thoroughly.
paint distinctly, describe.
, (see
parate into parts, divide, distinguish
)
se-
I take to pieces, se-

306

, ,
round, Plut.
I girt about,
5. 401. —
John 13. 4. sur-
fortify, Aw. 3. 5. 25.
parate the constituent parts of a thing, de-
stroy, demolish—separate truth from error,

,
having her garment decide a controversy, Herod. 4. 23.— sepa-

,
tucked up. rate the subject of a discourse, analyse, ex-

,
,
Plut. 6.

warmth through,
500.— the diaphragm.
warm
a girdle, scarf,

thoroughly, spread a
Thuc. 1 . 6.

,,
plain, set forth in words, 7. 50.— separate
the surface of the ground, dig, furrow, K.
9. 14. Jay open, Plut. 6. 661.

,— ,
, division diversity, 1 Cor. —

, ,,
Plut. 9. 189.
I view thoroughly, survey, con- 1 2. 4. / in distinguishing or reck-
sider distinctly, A. 3. 1 . 1 3. oning the votes, Eum. 746.

Od.
^,.), .
warm, Exod.
I purify with sulphur, fumigate,
494. Selov.

warmed through, am heated

^,,
Dem. 402.
16. 21.
I spread warmth through,

warmth. Plut. 10. 564.


etc,
ivith
am
wine,
Trach. 166.

sible
y\, ov, divided distinct portion,
be distinguished by reason,
i.e. comprehensible, explicable, Thuc. 1.84.
*(>, x, ov, to be divided
it is necessary to divide, must separate.

\, ov, capable of dividing divi-


adv. distinctly, metho-


, —

,,
}>.,, ,
A. R. 2. 12. 8.
hot through, heated with wine,

.
-^
dically, Plut. 9.
(see ),
202.
I raise the hand apart/rom

,
f. I run, spread through, 6. the body, lift up— raise the jaws asunder,
2. 6.— reach, Luc. 2. 107.— run to and fro, i. e. open the mouth, Dem. 375. — raise my-
Thuc.

will
8. 92.
,,
— appointment—
. . . — the setting off of a
disposal, A. R.
affection, disposition,
1. 12. 8.
self in

At or ,
a house, ascend, Phoen. 90.— convey
away,Plut. 10.787.moveacross,Polyb.l.60.
-, I hasten across, traverse,
(Ed T. 218.— I shoot, rush through, Ar-

.
7. subject,

',
amplification, Polyb.

hctown, ,

,
, interpreter, Herod.
Aiccun^ioo), I

,,
6,

covenant, Gal.
], will,
render quite savage or furious.
34. 4.
7. 6.
3. 1 5.
,chias, 30.
756.
,-,

flash upon the sight, Luc. 2.

I erase,
living ,,
destroy, Trach. 896.
mode of living, con-

,
<)(>{6, duct means of livi?ig, livelihood, diet

,
is infuriated, Plut. .7. 305.
-], oppress, afflict, Call. Ep. 10. place of living, abode, habitation, O. 7. 19.

,
f.

f. ,,
I throw into utter confu- the verdict of an arbitrator.
sion, alarm, Thuc. 5. 29. I act as a judge or arbitrator ad- —
— observe,
I see thro ugh, investigate judge, award, Theo. 12. 34.
.
-,
Equit. 540. Nub. 700.

^, ov, serene, bright, Plut. 3. 86.

, live, abide, spend life, 1. 6. 2. per.


pass. fahyTYipuii, I have been instituted,

^ ,
I spend the night in the open enjoined, Thuc. 7. 77.
, a mode of
,,
air, A. 4. 4. 6.

,,
Thuc. 6.— food, .
custom, living,

),
I noise abroad, spread a report, 1. 1. 6. 5.

^, , ,),
Thuc. 6. 46. E. 1. 6. 4.
I spread a report, pi up. pass.
it had been rumoured, Ax.
,,
ters
, , abode, 0.
, an arbitrator or judge mat-
of equity, A. R. 1. 13. 19.
9. 4.
in

1. ]. having my I separate what is unclean


from what — winnow, Luke
-
ears bored, teased with the talk of a clean, purify

,, ^^), $), ,,
i. e. is
person, Luc. 3. 503. 3. 17.
apart, O. 66. —be-

, . see
(for I I set, settle


break to pieces, bruise, shatter—
.,
I am broken in strength, debilitated

am broken in morals, am corrupted, ren-


dered effeminate,

^, :, , ,
1.2. 24. I become
soft or pliant, Theo. 15. 99. aor. 2. pass.
part, broken
— ,siege, 2
Aicckcio),
Luc.

,,,
uwsrxi,
3.
Sam.

82.
f.

,,
shall
11. 1.

,
burn through— inflame,
torrid zone.
conflagration, Plut. 9. 587.
I reveal distinctly,
display themselves,
- Dem.

,*,
,
to pieces, shattered, y. 363.
II. 55. 25.
-'), ,
I

f. I rush, move through 1 persevere in, E. 7. 4. 8.


Olym.
drive as a gale,

.
7. 175.
,',,
endure to the end, Plut. 6. 170.

,Hecub. 656.

. 202. ,
ou, soaked in blood bloody finger,

I water through, sprinkle, bathe, II.


I am watered, bathe my-
self in tears, Pcrsae, 256.

scriptures,
,,),
inf. hix T£
I
I

?\
I refute by means of the

,
urge against, Acts 18. 28.
split asunder, aor. 1.
oavce.
5iii/it^it'i.fi<ffi«/,tocleavcdrvwood.Od.o,321.
for
^,
.
X
— — — — — — —

,, ,,
307
I
I A
am disposed— -behave— am ,
,, , prompt to supply,
308
to ad-

, ,
si- v\, ov, fit

,
tuated, to be friendly minister, O. 7. 41. serviceable, Plut. 1171.
disposed, to treat with kindness, 1. 4. 1. . f. I throw a dart

,
tcx lic&Ksi^i'jot, the things which are, terms,
conditions, Herod. 9. 26.
across, hurl a javelin, . 1.4. 4.
I break through, cut asunder, A.
AtctKsiQa, I shear, crop off; frustrate, II. . 1. 8. 7.
—— penetrate by cutting separate, —
8. shorn of his goods, i. e. Anacr. 28. interrupt I am
robbed, Vesp. 1304.
,,
cut asunder from my object, frustrated,

,
,
I encourage apart, give to
each separate encouragement, c. dat. A.
3. 4. 27. exhort earnestly, command di-
stinctly, . 1. 4. 13.

, ,
],
), ,
Dem. 450.

,
it is necessary to

cut off or reject, must refuse.


a gash, rent, interruption.
also deflower, violateI

, ,
exhortation, encouragement. a virgin, Thesm. 487. Luc.
1. 320.

,
ov, quite vain, a vacant I cause to rumble, shake
-
space,
»,
Thuc. 5. 71.— fouvevw, adv. sc.
through an empty space, in vain,
froad. 753.

pieces, chop, Vesp. 789.


f. , I cut asunder into small ,
with rumbling noise, Nub. 386.

,
, ov, satiated, glutted, A. 1. 5. adv.
to be satiated, Polyb. 26. 2. 9.
,
u, two hundred, ducenti.
I divide, arrange, Luc. 1.27. .
), negotiate, treat, for peace
apart from others, Thuc. 4. 38.
I
.
I

expose to danger by coming


,
3. 3. 8. set in

rangement —
, order, adorn.
, distinct or separate ar-
orderly change, Plut. 8. 230.

,in front of,

4. 19.

8. 8. 3. am continually in
danger persist to face the danger, Thuc.

I move across, shake, K.

, — ex-
tiently,

),
I hear throughout, listen to pa-
decide a cause after a patient in-
vestigation, Acts 23. 25.
issue forth through a pipe pour —

,
3. 4.
cite, sift,
AictKheto),f. ,
Nub. 477. throw into commotion.
I break to

.
pieces — cut
fresh drink, Theo. 7. 154. x%nvy\. others
take ye have mixed or sea-
through, snap asunder, 11. e. 216.

— ^-,,
Aistxhsirrv,

Thuc. 7. 85.
I steal away
I steal
draw clandestinely— am cut off" privately,

AtuKhYiQoa, I draw lot between two persons,


or settle by lot, . 6. 8. 12.
,
— disguise the truth

&- , )
/-
myself away, with-
soned, from
I learn, express, with accuracy

investigate thoroughly, A. R. 1. 8. 7.

,
Tar. 38.
I cause to ring,
striking the sounding shell, Leon.

(see I separate— sepa-


,

having settled among themselves by lot rate with the eye, distinguish, discern se- —

-,,, distribute, appoint
I inherit by lot,

1;7,
by lot, M. Supp. 985.
appropriate
parate evidence, examine canvass, dispute
— hesitate, doubt, Mat. 21. 21.— separate

,
,
as my inheritance.
viding itself and spreading here and there,
said of a flame, Long. § 1 2. 4.

, bend aside, decline, Plut. 4. 124.


di-

fer, select,
made no
Herod. 8.
difference, Acts 15. 9.

a dispute, settle, decide separate one thing
from another ivith regard to their value, pre-
114. ,
, — separate
he

,,
,,
goad, Eccles. 953.
26.
94. ,, ^^,,
I
declining, retreat, Plut. 2. 765.
I overflow, Iphig. T. 167.
gnaw through, consume,
irritate, corrupt, Iph.
I am
A.
eaten away, Prom.
having my
sting,
,
persons fighting, II. . 292.

E. 5. 2. 10.

the eyes

,
tween
, —
spirits,
ij,

separate myself am separated, decided,
I

am determined, Herod. 7.206.


difference, interval
— the faculty of discriminating be-
whether they were
between

evil, or

}, ,
colour faded or grown rusty— broken down, the spirit of God, 1 Cor. 12. 10. — dcubt,

,
Agam. 65. dispute.

,
,, give ordersI while passing adv. decidedly, II. 103. .
through the ranks, marshal, .. 230. }>, ov, distinguished, excellent.

,
1

transport, Jos. 4. 3. E. 6. 2. 7.
,
swim
carry through, convey across,
I

, an attendant, waiter
a minister, 2 Cor. 3. 6.— minister of the
through or across.

,
, ,
I avert, protract,
evade by artful means, Dem. 988. 7. re-
ject, beat off; Plut. 6. 101. Herod. 7. 168.
,—
evasion, delay, Dem. 1265.
Mercury as ,
-

o:ccKo'jsa,
f.

,,
,
devil, a wicked agent, 2Cor. 11.15. h. deacon.
I minister, Anacr. 9. 14.
wait upon, Mat. 20. 28.
ministry, attendance,
10. 40.— distribution, Acts 6. 1.
Luke ,
herald or interpreter of the gods
,,
Musag.

svturvv,
the office of a herald
6. — overture.
I mix,
Dem.
ministry, —
confound by turning top-
263. 19,
,
309

^,
,
,
,, ,
fusing,

Mat.
I A

cause the waves to swell,


agitate, Luc. 1. 327.
I

I try a horse with a bell or


trumpet ascertain, Dem. 393. Luc. 2. 334.
I hinder,
3. 14.
prevent— persist

forbid, Plut. 2. 728.


in re-
,
,
, ,
very slender, Nub. 161.
ov,

I dispute with subtlety,


aim at reducing into a subtle element, i. e.

,. ,,
to consume by fire, Nub. 1498.

) inf.
Long. § 44.
to heal, (and not /£-
2.

310

,
, ) ,
,, ,
asunder, Phcen. 66.
truce, Thuc.
I distribute,

I burst asunder wilh noise, ex-
plode, Nub. 409.

,
I kick off, Theo. 24. 25.
3.
.
obtain, Plut. 8. 870.
87.
7. 3. 1. rend — reconcile, make peace,
concile

aor. 1.
be reconciled, Mat.
thyself,
vary, Dem. 1402. Polyb.
differ,
m.
TTu),see

37.
changed my own
24.

temper, altered my nature, Olym. 1 1. 22.


1

.
exchange

2.
5.
re-

1 1.

,
f. I speak, commune with exchanged with each other, 8. 3. 3. 1

another, Luke 6. 11. Cycl. 174. divulge, — , , reconciliation — terms or

'/,
, :,
Luke 1. 65. preliminaries of peace— the formula of a
(see I take apart, treaty or agreement, Dem. 1369.
separate, divide, Dem. 278. 23. receive ,, ,
interposition, media-
my share separate from the rest, appropri-
- tion, Helen. 592.
, ^^, ,
,
-,
ate, A. 5. 3. 5. StoQotxeg , a me-
,

,
the breast-plates had their weight se- diator, Septem, 927. — deliverer, Phcen. 471.
parated, i. e. equally diffused, instead of
02, I leap across, Ix. 8. 8.

,
pressing on one part —
take a siibject into }
discourse, ,

,
parts, discuss, relate distinctly, weigh, de- conversation, dialogzie.
liberate, Polyb. 3. 6. 6. — I reason, dispute, compute,

,
seize, intercept,
Herod. 4. 68. caught, 6. 6S. Mat. 21. 25. Mark 9. 33.
— hx'hx&siv, to catch, Herod. 1. 114. , , reasoning, thought, Luke
22.— doubt, Luke 24^ 28. — dispute

,
it is necessary to deliberate, 5.
must determine, Polyb. 6. 44. machination, 1 Cor. S. 20. — computation,

,, ,
'-,,,
744.

,


hochocuou
deliberation, opinion, 2 Mace.
3.32. purpose, aim, Polyb. 30. 17.2; 2.33.G.

reflect a lustre,
I am
. .
I shine through or abroad, Plut.
2. l. 22.
unperceived, 1. 4. 19.

having escaped no-


reckoning, Dem. 951. 20.

1456.— mutilate, Herod.

24. 32. —
I
melt, waste away
I revile,
pollute
9. 112.
loosen asunder, untie, Theo.
dissolve an as-

Dem.



542. 10.
— dishonour, Orest.

,
ticeheenters,he secretly enters, Thuc. 8. 74. sembly, dismiss end a ivar finish an ac-
f. |), I collect, gather apart, se- —
count refute— cancel rout, scatter, aor.—
parate, distinguish, levy an army — mark 1. pass. ;£>.&»&7<7«', were dispersed, Acts 5.36'.

, —
:,
out, ascertain, Lysist. 12\.--^ixXeyo^xi,
converse ivith a friend, commune with,
I

oi
sj, an untying, loosening the
dismissing an assembly— disbanding an army

,
ovhzv Dem. 1070, —the putting an end to dispute, reconci-
the laws have nothing in common with liation — dissolution —
the resolving of a

,
this, have no relevance to— converse with diphthong into its constituent vowels.

,
an adversary, dispute, treat with con-

, , ,
verse on a subject, I reason, discourse, Acts
17. 2.

-,
— address an assembly.
,6, tongue, Acts 1. 19.
of speaking, enunciation, dialect.
mode


,
Thuc. 8.
,
6, one who dissolves or violates,

82.
,
dissolved— enervated, Plut. 6.
515. to be pulled to pieces.
redemption, ransom, .
, ,,
with meal, Nub. 669.

,
skilled in conversing or I sprinkle

,
yi, ov,

,
^ ),
reasoning, fluent, logical
sc. the art of reasoning, logic.
,elocution, converse, Nub. 31G.


Luke 7. 45. leave some space between,
am distant, A. 4. 8. 10.
not leaving much space between,
,

I leave after a time, cease, omit,

hx-
,
Luc.

^,
1. 195.
I

pervert, mutilate, Polyb. 1 1.4.
f.


,
soften, soak through,

reduce to ashes, Agam. 832.

miss miss my end, fail, am dis-


appointed, opp. to
I
miss the truth,
f. ,

aor. 2. /-

4. 8. 11.
that part of a thing which is at a
distance from the rest, interval, space, A.
,
the in-
terval of the breast-plate, i. e. the interval
orpartofthebodynotcoveredbyit,Ix.l2.5.
^^), ,


mistake, err miss my steps, slip— miss the
right track, deviate from, lose, K. 6. 1 9.
f.

witness against resist the assertion or


claims of another by a counter testimony,
^, I bear

,', I lick clean, sweep away with the


tongue, devour, Equit. 1031.
protest against, Dem. 73. 2. 1088. prove —
in opposition, Acts 18. 5.- give distinct
X 2
311
and

,,,
,
, assurance, 20, 23.— solemnly en-
full
I A
—— —— —
A I A
I divide for myself,

312
Od. ,

,
join, charge, 1 Tim. 5. 21.

,
434.
,, a protest against an action \, q, continuance in life.

,^,,
at law by which a person resisted the claims adv.
, all across,
. Prom. 65. entirely,

,, ,
{,of another, Dem. 1080. pen.

— ,,—,,, knead, Aves,463.


Bacch. 981. ava,
adv. from one sids

,. . to the other, 284. quite through, en-


II. s.

I fight against,combat with, 3. 9. 2. tirely — ever, Philoct. 791. II. x. 331. ha,
contend Herod. 4. 11. imp.
for, ava,

,
they earnestly maintained against the other I hand down by tradition,

-,, ,
,
party, Acts 23. 9. record, Prom. 895.
I turn the mouth awry, dis-
f. I cut asunder with a sickle,

^), wry. ^,
/, tort in derision, Vesp. 1306.
aor. 1. footftYjaSj for hvtftws, tore off, Il.y.859.
— dig through, Thuc. 4. 26. I cut into small pieces, aor. 1.

,
1

,, . I dismiss, throw aside, Bacch. part. having divided, Herod.

, ,, .
,,627. give up, neglect, Eur. Elect. 978.
, — change
1.

~;, ,
132.

,,
f. I change for one very different,Prom. 556.
place for another, pass through, Iph. T. 399. I debate, controvert.
— pass through _

exchange for myself,


I sing,
life, spend—
Theog. 316.
chaunt, Plut. 10. 53.
I
f. ,
), controversy, litigation.

for this reason to have been com-


perf. inf. pass, tnnuety-

,, , ,^
— cut—
I dismember,
in pieces, Plut. 10. 127. pelled or to have brought himself, 8. 2.4. .
,
^,
?^ 1:.,, tearing the limbs
to pieces, dismemberment
limb by limb, in pieces.

-

6,

},
faotpeTiiirt,

I delay,
adv.

pro-
rising or starting up, K. 10.
18. Polyb. 5. 70. 8. ,
by sea, decide by a naval
engagement, Plut. 9. 441. Herod. 8. 63.

, ,,
f.

crastinate, Luc. 1. 69. Aiocvo"ix,ot, adv. in two ways one of two —


-,
delay.

,
?-/; tyjv ^{"7\
Thnc. 5. 99, they will
tt^oc things only, II. /. 37. ava, }>i%x.
I expose to the wind.

, , ,, - , .,
make the delay of guarding against us long, to float in the wind, Luc. 2. 465.
they will wait long before they have to f. aor. I divide,
guard against us, or they will scarcely evei distribute— measure, survey land — distri-
need to guard against bute a report, divulge, Acts 4. 17.
, us.

, f. p. I remain
throughout, continue to the end— remain 6. 450.
to divide among
it is
themselves, Plut.
necessary to dis-

, &, ,
unchanged, am preserved, Gal. 2. 5.— re-

,
tribute, must divide, 0. 7. 36.
main and not forsake, am faithful, steadfast, — 7, division, ar-

, , —
Luke 22. 28. remain and not perish, sur-

,rangement — distribution, Plut.9. 257.

,
vive, Heb. 1. 11.— remain and not depart,

Mat.
Luke

, ,,
abide, tarry.
I divide into parts Or shares,
27. 35. divide into opposite parties,
11. 17.

,,
schism, Luke 12. 51.
ov, division,
,
,
-, —
apipe,¥yth.
nod, signify by a nod, Luke 1. 22.
imp. I swim, sail, across.
I bloom all over, per. pass. /•-
spangled, adorned, Luc. 2. 469.
I pass through, as sound through
12. 43.

,
a measure across, a diame-
ov, 6, I rise up. raising
separate from, Thuc. 4. 128.

,
ter, from the diameter, quite himself up
I turn over in my
opposite, Luc. J. 636.
&(>, f. ,
I measure the distance be- mind, think design — — determine, perf. hx-

,
,
tween, take the dimensions I measure

,,,,
For

. ,
,
out, II. y. 315.

, ,
appoint, limit,
ov,
I measure out
myself in portions, divide,
Dem.
measured,
378. 7.
II.

.
y. 344.
7. 5.5. —
A.
he has it in
5. 7. 9.
7. 7. 28. aor. 1.
his mind, he purposes,

nor did I
purpose, had no design, 7. 7. 29. plup. <-

,, ,,
for they had designed,
},
plup. hsvsvonro, he had intended,

,
f. I divide or part the Herod. 7. 206.
thighs, Aves, 1254. Ita, sentiment, thought.

,,
,,
perf. inf.
or retain in the memory, At. 1. 4. 13.
to learn V, thought, reflection, device,
intention, intellection, Plut. 10. 10.

,
I bring to mind, suggest yi, ov, capable
of thinking, intel-
I am held in remembrance, ligent, intellectual. liavoYinxov, the intelli-
am recorded,
mind, recollect.
1. 2. 2.

I
.
bring to my own

tear to pieces, Hec.



1067,— , gent principle,
desire, Arist. Ethic,
, vj,
^ixvoyitixyi, intellectual

. 2.
the discursive power of the
— —— — — —— ——
313

.
mind —mind, .
Aixurciloi,
2.
penetrating through
wound, Septem, 896.
-,,
ov, —
3. 12. 6.

open thoroughly— open —


,.
— thought, sense,

stretch along, 733.
Dem. 1199.
open, spread,
fatal
^,
,,, —,
(see
different parts, desert, disperse,
,)
Lysist.
I
I go away into
314

,,
the

-\,
,
eyes,
f.

see — open
I
hear— open
the mind, enlarge, enlighten — open the
scriptures, explain, Luke
open or spread my wings,
through or away
the ears,

24. 32.
I
lia-
away, vanish,

,
,
i.

,,
,
e. I fly

(Ed. T. 1332.— fly along or over.


I

I fly

,
I endure pain to the end, e. sur- I play at dice, hazard.

^,
i.

vive, Pyth. 4. 522. sustain. thoroughly inquire,Agam.808.


spend the night throughout, I leap across, Dem. 726. 5.
part, Luke 6. 12, he was I fatten thoroughly. }>&\,
",,
I am grown very fat, Theo. 16. 91.

,)
spending through the night, spent or con-

,,
tinued the whole night, see E. 5. 4. 3.
or <U;c£i>£ra), 1 finish a thing in hand,
,, I imbitter
am exasperated, Plut. 7. 792.
I

,,
bring to an end, Od. . 517. dispatch tra- — I contend in drinking, Hedyl. 7.

,
",
,
778.

,,

verse a way close a discourse, uvua.
I attack with a sword, Equit.

, a sword-combat, Plut.
lead through the several
.
, .
8. 359.
stages
,
-,
E. 3.2.3.
(see


I fall asunder, fall
into pieces, perish, Plat. Dial.
away, escape, Equit. 692.
having slipped out of the battle,
err, fail,
--
215.— fall

degenerate, Plut. 6. 683.


of education, educate

, ,
strictly, 1. 2. 15. I distrust, Polyb. 3. 52. 6.— dis-
adv. for
times, ever— throughout.
,, otoc at all credit, Dem. 870.

,,
I thoroughly confide, trust

,
to,.

,,
,
,,
I fix by lot, allot,
I breakintosplinters,,Phten.l
, ,,
~,
Septem, 733.
1 66.
Dem. 80. 26. Polyb. 5. 40. 7.
I form, feign, Plut. 8. 195.
feign for myself, Dem. 575. 8.

,
vain dispute, fruitless
subtleties, 1 Tim. 6. 5. , formation, configuration.

/, , , ,
,
deflower a virgin, violate. render broad and stout, A. 2.
on stakes fixed 6. I grow bulky.

,,
I stretch in
the ground, peg down, Equit. 376. I entwine, interweave, Aves, 755.

—, ,
sprinkle over malice, dissimulation.

,
-),
, & ,
a thing sprinkled, colour, paint, Plut. 10.1 16.

,,
I deceive


deceived deceive myself, mistake.
I cause to cease
I am

arrest a disease, —
a ship
life,
— navigate the sea of
Herod. 5. 92.
I sail across, I
cross in

ov, 6, sailing across,


life, embark

passage
in

ad-

,
heal, Os. 5. 13.— give rest, 1. 7. 18. employed
jectively, Persae, 380. in sailing

, , ^,, I hunger. or tacking about.

,
for
the

,,, ,
,
fire,

29. Herod.
Acharn. 751.
, a
1.
trial,
47.
we

experience, Olym.

I try, explore, Dem. 1180.


starve at

4. — refresh with
pate into
I

air,
I strike in pieces, U.
draw the breath through, revive
the breeze, 2. 2. 25. dissi-
Plat. Dial. 216.
•. 120.

, ,
ov,parti-coloured, Luc. 1.474,
I pierce through, II. v, 405. aor. — f. varnish, Plut. 8. H55.

,
2. pass. having his thigh pierced, I bring the war to a close

,
,,
,
Plut.

, ,
7.

— dispatch
308.
I send in sundry ways, . 4. 5.
bear down
making war upon, A.
in war, conquer

,
compel by
3. 3. 3.

,
3. presents, Plut. 6. 590. — ha- warfare, Thuc. 7. 43.
dispatch for myself am
I send, — , , a commission, dispatch.
sent or dispatched. proceed in array, Luc. 1. 478.

)
I reach the end, finish, Androm.

,,
oy, wearied, exhausted,

),
Plut. 6. 5 1 4.
333. I conclude, Luc. 2. 319. I continue to labour well, culti-

,^,,
I convey across vate, Polyb. 4. 45. 7.— I am

,
I convey myself over, pass over, Thuc. 8. wearied wearied in mind, grieved, indig-

,32.

brandished.
Ajax, 741, swords
went from one side to the other, i. e. were

I pass over, cross— spend life,


nant, Acts 4. 2.— I exert or exercise my-
self— finish with accuracy.
ov, across the sea, Theo. 14. 55.
I carry across, convey over, A.
Plut. 6. 432.

^,
Androm. 1237.

pass onthe throne, rule over,

I break through the fortifications


of a city, plunder, waste, II. >j. 32. ,2. 5. 3. I convey myself,
pass through or across, traverse, frequent,
K. 5. 32.
I want a passage through, (,
—I — —

)
,
315

- ,,,, ^, , .
316

,
I am perplexed, Luke 24. 4.— elevation, Long. § 12. convey-
doubt, hesitate, question, Acts 2. 12. ance over, Polyb. 10. 8. 2. fr.
I lay waste, plunder, , , quite sufficient, competent.
/, I am now become a prey to my ene-
, most abundantly, At. 2, 8. 6.

-,
mies, am undone, Ajax, 906.
.
/ f. I suffice,

am sufficient
a siege, hold
or

,
I ferry over, Luc. 1 423. . equal to, 8. 6. 9. resist
I dispatch, Polyb. 5. 42.
^,— ,—
out. prevail, Septem, 844.

,
(>,
/«-)7, ng, sending of delegates between f. I tear asunder, rend, Orest.
two parties, Polyb. 5. 37. 3. 1452.

,
attune, adjust, Polyb. 8. 27. 5.

%, ,
I traffic, Luke 19. 15. I snatch away by force, plunder

,—
discuss, Plat. Dial. 256.
^,
— dissipate, K. 6. 2.

complish, effect

.
I act to the end, finish, ac-
cause, execute
— dispatch a person,
treat —
,^,

plunder, Polyb. 10. 16. 6.
f. /,
I shed, sprinkle all over

,-, ,,,
procure, obtain kill spread, pour themselves in
I effect by artifice, obtain by distinct streams, Trach. 14.
intrigue, Dem. 22. 1 9. we I hammer to pieces, shatter, Od.
are undone, Helen. 864. . 290. utterly destroy, Prom. 236.
,, illustrious, conspicuous, I flow through, vanish, Ajax, 1284.
excellent, adverbially, Eur. Supp. 841. Ax. ,, that ivhich flows through, a cur-

,
,
2. 1. 27.

",
most becoming, most worthy

&, , , sj,
in a

adv. in a distinguished manner.


manner the
of.
distinction, excellence.
rent

/,
$>/,
,
,
the medium offlowing, a windpipe.

,
yj, a flux, diarrhoea.

a clear explanation.
adv. in direct terms, expressly,

,
I excel, am becoming, Plut. 9. 91. from to speak, Luc. 2. 20.

,, ,
surpass, Alcest. 658.

delegates, E. 3. 2. 17.
I

the Ionic form of



I }>, ,,
send a messenger, dispatch
AtxftfmyvfffAt
li*(>pxyw, I tear asunder,
burst itself,
indignation, Dem. 169. 19.
f.
f<y,
rend— burst.
Luke 5. 6. burst with
-
aor. 2. pass.

p.

, <, , ,
dispatch my way, II. a. 484.

-,
dispatch
pass through, arrive at, Herod. 4. 24.
m.
/-,
I burst, Plut. 6. 305.
I toss about — scatter,

,
, ^ , -
,
-Qo,
I give information, Herod. 4. 76.

I cut, saw, asunder. /££// ro, they

,
gnashed their teeth, Acts

.
quite, far asunder,
7. 54.
Theo. 22. 201.
hurl, Polyb.

about, bounding,
f.
.

\,
4.

.
7; 16. 21.
>,
a throwing
8.

A. 5. 8.3.
4. 4. scattering,
cause to spread like the

,
, ",.
II. 3.

, , Ion.
,

through,
I fly, dart

~ /,
ou,
227. Helen. 1324.

3 1 J Med. 1.
I alarm, terrify,
Plut. S. 232. Polyb. 3. 51. 5.
.
flaming, clear, loud sound,

.
noise of a torrent, Septem, 194. fr.
I pierce with a whizzing noise,
penetrate, Trach. 577.
I flow away, slip insensibly through
the fingers, Luc. 2. 910.
cay through effeminacy.

waste away, de-

,.
my way
I expand the wings, wing Nubes, 871,
^,
lips which open widely, aor.

,
through, Plut. 10. 732. 2. part. pass, having slipped away,

,
,
,},
,
,
,

,, . ,
,

,
,
unfold, explore, Plut. 8.465.
, a fold,
a folded letter, Iphig. T. 793.

,
I spit out, reject, Plut. 6. 384.
,
&- said of money insensibly diminished by con-
tinued expenses, Dem. 182. 10.
adj. broken asunder, rifted
rock, Iphig. T. 262.
, -.

,
,comfiture, error, Polyb. 16. 17. 8. fr.
combat with,
,
7. 5. 18.
ignited, Cycl. 627. fiery.
.
a

, -,
,,
fall, dis-


, elevation, Long. § 8.
lifting or removing, Polyb. 2. 33. 5.
I cut into small bits, tear asun-
der devour, Prom. 1031.

,
^,
,
,
he flamed

8.
Ethic, x.
I reduce by fire, kindle.

,
forth in mind, Plut. 4. 304.
f. dispose of, E. 4. 6. 6.
I break through, Hes. x. 364.
form completely, organize, Plut.
520. articulate, complete a sketch, Arist.
7.
, organization, Plut. 6. 884.
,
, , ,
stinctly,
I fawn, cringe, K. 4. 3.
I play the wanton, move
lasciviously, Vesp. 1164. salax.
;£>,58,8^6
certify, Mat. 18. 31.
, 3. 1. 11. .
pieces, Polyb.
I
give clear information, instruct,

manifestation, Esdr. 7. 10.



show, explain
1. 48.
di-


-,
hxQtuf&wts,
I
,, enumerate, Iphig. T. 966.
enumeration, reckoning.
I contend for the mastership,
dispute the palm, Long. § 13.
12. —
I shake asunder move the tail
shake with fear, disturb, agitate, Dem. 154.
treatwithviolence,Luke3. 14. shake
with hope, animate, cheer, Luc, 1. 675.

,
317

,
,signal, A. 2. 1. 16.
ov,
I clearly intimate
fr. .
very plain, Philoct. 212.
— show by a

di-
fouavoQU,

{»,

,
i], dispersion, Plut. 10. 546.

the dispersed Jews, Jam. 1.1.

&, I hasten through, contend, Po-


— —
318

,
stinguished, illustrious, Plut. 6. 2. lyb. 4. 33. 9.

,
,
pitious,

,,,
I rot through, Luc. 2. 263.
Aiuaiu, ay, toc,
fr. hoc,,
a
,
festival

pass over in silence,


taunt, Luc. 2. 348.
scoff,
of Jupiter the pro-
misfortune, Nub. 864.

I keep silent or secret, Ion. 1 566.


Olym. 1 3. 1 30.
-,
,
iously guard,


I earnestly
Dem.
505. 8.
endeavour, anx-

I remove a fold so that the


flock contained in it manure a fresh spot
place mankind at a distance from other

,
animals, remove, civilize, Eur. Supp. 213.

,,,, ,,
,,, I bound along, Apoll. 1. 574.
weed out, pick, Plut. 10.80. 82.

,
,-, ,
against —
f. I raise a disturbance
cause a revolt, Plut. 1. 127.

,
I imitate Euripides, whose f. I separate or secure by a

,
mother sold herbs called Equit. 1 9. palisade, Thuc. 6. 97.

s. 368. —

disperse, rout —
f. ?, I scatter,
efface, waste,
Od.
An-
, v>„ separation, Paul. Sil. 39.
disunion, distance, Plut. 9. 509. fr. ,-.

,,
tig. 291.

berate, E. 3.
observed, Thesm. 687.

ter, Dem.
I
1.

throw
,,
I consider
21.


thoroughly, deli-
to have been

utensils asunder, scat-


845. 13. furnish with proper
utensils, supply, arm, Polyb. 4. 1. 13.—
. ,
—-,,
-,
,
ov, distant, extended, Plut. 9. 498.

tious speeches, Plut. 3. 818.


,,
space, Luke 22. 58.

/«$),
sc. ,
ou, calculated to disjoin sedi-

distance, interval, space.


after a short

proceed through, Theo. 27. 68.

,
tamper with, plot against the judges, 3. I send here and there, delegate
7. I prepare, arm myself, E. — move aside, open, Plut. 6. 693. differ
^,,,
,
4. 2. 12. with, Polyb. 18. 30. 11. I
,, furniture, ornament, Exod. distinguish, explain distinctly, Polyb. 23.

-,
31. 7. dress, implements, Polyb. 8. 31. 7. 9. 10. enjoin, prohibit, ^70\
-, , ^-,
>
I teach, discipline thoroughly. prohibition, Heb. 12. 20.
I live in a tent, lodge under co- \, distinction di- —
vering, opp. —^,-, stinct sound, 1 Cor. 14. 7. —
fuller expla-

,
it is
necessary to shelter, must quarter for the —
nation expansion of the heart reconci- —
,,
,,
night, A. 4. 4. 9.
-,
liation, covenant, 2 Mace. 1 3. 25.

,,
, ,
I quarter in tents, A. 4. 4. 6. f. ,, separate by points, decypher,

I prop, Philip. 9.

.
— &,
A. R. 3. 5. 6.

,
,-,
I scatter ascend spreading I glitter, reflect lustre, Pax, 566.

,,
as smoke, Luc. 1. 537.
I look through, survey diligently.
,&,, cram wadding between, ce-
I
ment with reeds and bitumen, Herod. 1.179.

),
hs Thuc. 6. 59, he examined well.
watch, inspect, II. . 252.
,-,
establish, Prom. 230.
I arrange the letters settle,

,
disperse, scatter seed, sow I lighten or flash through.
scatter a flock, plunder— scatter goods, I turn, bend aside, distort—
waste, squander, Luke 15. 13. — scatter ene- pervert — divert by unfair means, Acts 13.

}>, ^-^, depraved, perverse, Phil.

,
mies, rout. 8.
I scoff, rail, roiurot 2. 15. perversely, in a

, -,
these things were scoffed at, these railleries crooked manner.

,were indulged
I
in, .
by rubbing.
rub, cleanse
8. 4. 10.
,- -,, ou,
distortion, perversion.
perverted, infatuated, Herod.

,,
,,
(),
rubbed with salt, Nubes, 1239.
drive away scornfully, Plut.
8. 904.
act the sophist, deceive by

Att.
I
cunning language, Aves, 1619.
,
I tear asunder
,
,
1. 167.
AioiavQco, I tear
42. 4.

figure
—traduce, Dem.
asunder, destroy, Polyb.

, detraction, diasyrmus,
6,
vilify,

which extenuates the great and ex-


1 69. 22.

.
5.

, .,,,
,,
tear with words, reproach, Luc. 2. 776. aggerates the little, Long. § 38.

), ov, torn to pieces, Bacch. 1216.

,,
-, a gash in the throat,
murderous, Antip.Sid.84.

,
I rend asunder, tear off, pull in
pieces,Acts28.10.distract,violate,IL8.5.12.
&,,,
tion, Plut. 6.
aor. 2.
ov, 6,
286.
pass.
,,
—rent, convulsion, 6.490.
— 1)7?,
distrac-
,,
hills,
,
a gap, Lye. 1062. Plut.
an opening between two
8.
scatter in balls, Bacch. 1125.
I thoroughly secure.
47.

I
Acts
scatter asunder as seed sown, disperse,
s..l. Polvb. 3. 19. 7. — disseminate. -^, I fail entirely, miscarry.
I launch off
3

,
19
with a sling.
in splinters, A. 4. 2. 2.

,,

of branches, Plut. 4. 102.


/, —
they rebounded
quarter by means

form like a wasp, Vesp. 1067.


I ,, ,
"-.- ^),

,,
,, I
(see
asunder, II. . 6 18. dissect,
,
,))
I A
bring to pass, II. r. 90.
I cut through or

cutting, decision,
.2. 3. lacerate.
Septem, 934.

320

,
I form accurately, I bore through,
,,
,, 1. 194.

penetrate,
to have been curiously made, Luc.

imp.
II.
»,
. 100. see
cleave asunder, II.
I split,
f.I render safe, save
316.
save
.
I hold, pass


through,

.

,penetrate, Herod.
AiocTYiKO),
wax. A.

fully

^,

guard,
Acts 15. 29.
4. 5. 5.
I

^,
Dem.
3. 12.
melt thoroughly, said of snow or
Nub. 149.
keep thoroughly, observe care-
115. 26. —preserve,
from

.
27. 43.
danger, deliver, rescue
disease, heal, restore,

7.
— save from
save from
convey
attach, protect, defend,
Save from breaking save my
4.
safely,


Acts Atari, for lice
Aiarifapt, (see

)
preservation, caution.
for what reason, why?
I put through, dis-
pose dispose of my affairs, manage, con-
faith or promise, keep, E. 7. 2. 27.

,,
my effects, secure, preserve, Asr. 1. 5. 2.

,,,
save in my memory, retain, 3. 5. 22. oiuau-

— it is necessary to save, must preserve

myself.
I am saved through
save

save
they preserve, retain,



order, arrange


,
duct dispose of things in confusion, set in
dispose of my goods, sell
dispose of my property after death, regu-
late by a will, I will. 6
tator
the tes-
—-dispose of a'dispute, decide, settle
covenant, promise solemnly— affect, treat,

,
,
for themselves,
1. defend, aor. 1. pass.

2, ,
14. 13. —
.
8. 8. 8. —secure,

rescued from disease, were healed, Mat.


they safeiy arrived, E. 4. 5. 17.
disturb, alarm, Plut. 2. 463.

,,
1.
they were
. Thuc. 1.
liate, attach,
hxrtQsfixt, settle
for myself, or for
—mutually
— dispose
126.
E.
—impress,

settle
5. 10. 4.
my own
my own
influence

a dispute, Att.
.
affairs
use, .
— conci-
— dispose
5. 2. 3.
2. 6. 23.

, -,
q, consternation, Plut. 7. 257. of, sell, 4. 5. 14. settle upon,

,, , ,
q, distension, A. E. 6. 5. bequeath or promise, Luke 22. 29.

,
Att. I place in order, ar- a plucking off* Paul. Sil. 41.
range for battle-^hccrccTTsauai, to be ar- estimate accurately, Lev. 27. 14.

ranged to arrange or station myself, E. Aixrtuxaaa, I shake to pieces, Od. s. 363.

,
7. 5. 10. —
plup. for ov, red hot, Vespie, 328.

',
Tot had been drawn up or arrayed, Herod.

",——,
1. 80. ordain, order, instruct, Mat. 11. 1.
arrangement, ministration, Acts
I cut asunder, cut into parts
plow the waves, aor. 2. pass,
H. a. 531, they separated
for ,,
,
, ,
7. 53. rank, station, Rom. 12. 2. themselves.

", ,,
hocrxysvto, direct, . 8. 3. 14.
command, edict, Heb. 1 1.28. the bow,
I rival, contend with, in using
.
l. 4. 4.

,

,,
arrangement, regulation. ov, piercing, Prom. 7. 6. loud
—acute —perforated,

,
adv. shortly, soon, II. 1. 3. 4. sound pain (Ed. T.
I soak with blood, Iphig. T. 404. 1044. tuqo).

,,
to.
I stretch across, extend
I

pertain
exert myself—urge, in-
Aixrgaytvfca, I describe in pompous lan-
guage, exaggerate, Dem. 282. 22.
-
),
crease, maintain,

^,, ,—
,,
,
),
Polyb. 8. 34. 2. secure, 2. 5. 6.

3. 34. fortification, fence.


Dem. 275.
earnestl}7 , Arist. Ethic. /. 4.
I separate, fortify by a wall,
8.

a separation-wall, Thuc.

, ,
lyb. 5. 4. 20.
Plut. 4. 383.—

, - &,
fling over the neck.
precipitated, Plut. 7. 953.
I turn aside, avert by fear, Po-


pervert, subvert, confound,
I turn myself

away through fear, am confounded or di-

stinctly signify, Hes.


,,
I
396. g.

,.
teach by clear signs, di-

reaching the end, effectual,


verted, 1. 798. 20.
33. Dem.
calculated to divert.
y, ov,
», altered, different, Iph. A. 559.

^,
(Ed. C. 1587. perpetual.
end, continually, Bacch. 1250.

7.
f. y\ao), or

to an end, finish
,
by sync.

In the sense of continuing, it may be
rendered ever, without interruption,
to the

I bring
arrive at, reach, A. 1. 5.

,
they conti-
nued practising works of virtue, i. e. they
ever practised, &c. persevere, remain,—
\,

-
— ,
8. 7. 3.

),
to
maintain.
,
consternation, shame, Polyb.

live upon, A. 4. 7. 12.

and
(see
,
,
alterations
accompanied with nausea, Plut. 7. 741.

, ) I feed well —
nurse, Meleag. 1 20.
I maintain myselij

food, maintenance, 1 Tim. 6. 8.


I run through, run
pervade —run through the sea,
continue, Acts 27. 33. Dent. 9. 7. sail- fast, Od. y. 177. — run through a course
— — — — —
321 A A

,^,
I 32:2
ofpleamre, enjoy eagerly, exhaust, At.
1. 31.
, 2. tear, distract,
the difference,
Chocph. 66. differ, cause

&,
Hec. 597.— differ from ex-

, for
trembling,

/ - ^, ,
I pierce through,

II.

I
.
consume time, delay dwell
729.

upon, dwell upon my affairs, engage in, ex-


ha
they scampered away with


cellence, degenerate,

excel ,
degenerate from or become inferior to
thee, Ajax, 511.—-differ from mediocrity,
used impersonally, it mat-
ters, it concerns, Herod. 1. 85. -it differs,
^^,
lie shall

, ercise, Dem. 22. 25; 785. ult.— spend the


time in speaking,
oris of consequence— I differ,
disagree in sentiments, Polyb. 4. 23. 7.—-

,
one who has spent his time in phi- —contend, rival, At. 4. 4. 8.

, ,
losophy—retard, Od. v. 341.— bruise to
pieces, crush, Herod. 7. 120.

., }>, , {], delay, Phoen. 768.


about which a person tarries, lucubration,
the thing
ceedingly,
adv. differently,

not otherwise than.


I slip through
q,
es-
signally, ex-
much better.

,
^, disputation, treatise. cape, Plut. 2. 157. Iphig. T. 1326.— slip
ov, trembling, Bacch. 592. from the memory, Plut. 6. 300.

. , ov, apt to escape volatile. —

,
drive, hasten directly through,
.

, , 7. 11.
ov, each row having the vine al-
ternately planted with other trees,Od.iy.341.

-
aor. 2. I eat through,
/,, I divulge, Mat. 28. 15.
I corrupt thoroughly corrupt
the body, destroy, spoil— corrupt the sight,
injure, impair— corrupt the mind, pervert.

,
Vesp. 366.— gnaw, corrode, A. R. 2.24. 6. voov, having his mind de-

- I shoot across— spring hop to and — praved, depraved in mind, 1 Tim. 6. 5.


^^,

,
fro— flash

,
out, Plut. 8. 321. aor. 2. pass, waste, decay.
, I

,
, .
),
Aiotvyyjc,

, ,
shooting
Plut. 3. 24.
,
eg,

,
stars,

transparent, bright,
falling meteors, ha,

At -, , ,
«,, corruption, destruction.
a corrupter, destroyer.
disband an army per-
I dismiss, —

, ^,
-,
^ ,
transparency, brightness.
shine, brighten, 2 Pet. 1.19.
ov, ,
dour, brightness, Hab. 3. 3. Plut. 9. 539.
splen-
mit to pass, Thuc. 7. 82. E. 3. 2. 17.

§,
I contend earnestly against.

f. ,
dispute,
I burn through,
combat with.

, ,
, (from the Arab. b)l, dawal, to

^,
return, or move by turn) a return from the

., ,
comprehend two courses.
goal, so as to
courses of waves, i. e. waves
mind was inflamed,

6.
— pass through,
he had

I
traverse,
his

wander, rove about,


mind kindled,
Plut. 7. 322.
.
his

6. 2.

-,
advancing and retreating in succession, He- Ajax, 332,become mad,
is is maddened.
cub. 29. ov, different — discordant
}>\,. , one who ran the double — excellent, Heb.
), ., adv. dif-
1. 4.

,^ , , . ^,,
,,
course, called the Pyth. 10. 14. ferently, with the least dif-
eat through, bite off, Plut. 8. 13. ference — dividedly, partially, opp. to
quiteclear,CEd.T.773. — trans- one accord — excellently, exquisitely,
parent. adv. clearly, distinctly. Polyb. 13. 7. 2. ov, that ,
, transparency, Plat. Dial. 294. which is carried between people, circulat-

,
show

, ^^,
I distinctly, exhibit, diV ing medium, money, Polyb. 4. 18. S. dis-
play, Polyb. 1

appear through or between, imp.


2. 24. — betray. cord,

2. 3. 5. , diversity ,
I dissention, difference, dispute, E. 7. 4.
,, —

,
a space appeared between 1 5. excellence.

, ,. ,
the dead bodies or clear of them, II. d. 491. I carry asunder, tear to pieces,
— show myself partially from behind a co- torn by dogs, Herod, 7. 10.
— am
vering distinctly seen, Nem. 3. 123. — scatter, dissipate — plunder— harass.
— dawn, Herod.

, .
8. 83. f. |&•, I separate by a hedge,

,
shine through, dawn.
I mark out, fortify, Plut. 2. 270.
,, !),
),
, ), ,
transparent, ns, a rupture, gash, Neh. 4. 7.
^)
, ,
(see carry through, convey a hedge, diaphragm.
— carry to the end, aor. 1. part. p.m. I explain, show
.
having finished the ivar, Herod. plainly* II.

), 9.

, , ,,
1 25.
• —
carry on war, continue, 1.18. bear for I convey, Aves, 193.

,
carry through a war, wage, Herod. 1. I fly, slip through,
18.— carry life through, lead, spend, 3. 40. escape, Thuc. 7. 44. II. 5. 3. 9.
— carry with
was disseminated,
the tongue, divulge.
Act? 13. 49. — carry
,
f. I spring
, escape.
up between — accrue
to and fro, toss, drive— carry asunder, from, Plut. 8. 215. f. m. with
323

,the Ionic augment, will be,


dissipated into air, Plat. Dial. 216. aor. 2.

,,
1. 61.
had intervened or elapsed, Herod.
— — .

,,
have

),
in use, Herod.

A
1. 71.
8. 1 18, he no longer used
marches, he no longer marched by land.


ov, inlaid with gold, gilded.

.,
c d. ov% it

324
-
.

,
r,c, , a seam or suture, by which I spread through,

~,
two things grow together, A. 5. 4. 16.
. dilate, expand, Plut. 8. 706.— cause to cir-

,
fissure, separation, Plut. 2. 721.


or

eye, observe watchfully


preserve, Polyb.
I guard myself,
guard, A.
f. |a>, I

7. 6. 16.
,
guard tho-
roughly guard a house, secure, defend,
guard a person, protect guard with the

, 1.
am
78. 8.

,, ,
— keep
guarded, or on
faithfully,

my
culate, penetrate,

asunder.

Dem.
f.

1482. 26.
,
I sweep, lick,
.

I
7. 1.
cause to evacuate, secrete— separate, set
apart, 0. 8. 11.— succeed, Polyb. 18. 23. 3.
— I separate myself, part
16.— discharge,

waft through.
deceive, disappoint,
I deceive,

, ,, 3. 16.
must guard.
f. , ,
ex, soy,

or
to be guarded,

aor. /, I
5.
it is necessary to guard,
.
pour
•^
falsify — deceive it hi-
myself, perf. part,
,),
those who
are mistaken or disappointed in regard to

/,
their own power, At. 4. 2. 27. -
, ., ,
through,
os
ci/aj t.

%,
the steel tore
asunder, ripped out, his bowels, II. |. 517.
for
6. 630.
a false principle or

to vote one by one, to give


dogma, Plut.

,, ,
-,
,
37. 11.

,
ov,
am

Iphig. A. 1340.
for
6, ij,

separate myself,
I
I loosen asunder, relax
dissonant, discordant.
at variance with
he has finished speaking, expired, Ezek.

7. 1. 16.
open,

I open the mouth, trate.


.

an independent vote, vote against, Dem.
747. 11.— vote separately, decide, deter-
mine, E. 1. 7. 6.
suffrage, vote, decision.
I whisper, mutter, Sir. 12. 24.
I dry, cool, refresh, Thuc. 7. 190.

-,
Od. . 478, breathe through, pene-
,

,.
,
gape, Equit. 530. It is said of poetry or ov, two-footed, Rhes. 215.
/,-,
,, music when deficient in harmony, or where a
verse has a disagreeable hiatus.
I pass the winter, Plut. 3. 171.
ov, having two points, i. e. a clasp,

Theodor. 3. twice cast, Rhes. 274.


^tlrlKia, ij, ,
a double wrapper, Plut. 2.

,
^, —
^ ,
I handle, administer, A. 1. 9. 10.

,
pierce with the hand, slay, Acts 5. 30.

^, ,
, administration, management.
cj, the wielding of a thing in
1 50. —
a doubly cast arrow, i. e. an arrow
after being thrown, drawn back again by
means of a chain, Plut. 2. 850.
ov, 6, v„ double-sighted, both eyes,

:), , .
,
the hand. for Theo. Ep. 6.
Septem, 791, having ov, double-tongued, skilled in

,
determined their rights by the law of the both languages, Plut. 1. 450.
/,
2, ,,..
,
sword wielded in the hand, and not by the Ar ov, twin, two kindred bodies, Eur.
law of equity. Elect. 1 1 79,
I lift my hand against one f". I teach, instruct, train,

, ,
resolution and in favour of another, sanc-
tion, decree, E. 1. 7. 11.
,
vote, suffrage, E. 3 . 7. 1 1
division on a question, E. 1.7. 11. delibera- ,inform,
self,

,,
learn,
cusatives,
from
. 1.2. 8.
I am taught, teach my-
It governs two ac-

necessary to teach, must in-


it is

, , )
tion, right of suffrage, Dem. 596. 5. form or discipline, E. 6. 3. 5.
(see — I pour, spread instruction, warning, Mosch.
— dissipate — — con- .
asunder
found,
efface, K. 5. 3.
they melted away, de-

,,——
6. 4. precept, 6. 13.
— -/, , instruction, disci-

,,
,
serted, E. 7. 4. 32. disorder, tear, Theo. doctrine— tradition, Mat. 16. 12.

,
pline

,
I
,
22. 203. dissolved taught —
ov, learned — ca-
skilled,

,
,
in luxury. pable of being taught, communicable,Trach
,
creation, sport, Plut. 6.
, diffusion —relaxation,
436; 8. 501.
re- 64. acquired by art, opp. to
yi,
natural.
ov, capable of teaching— dis-

,, I continue to mock, Acts 2.

,,
posed to be taught, docile, 1 Tim. 3. 2.

, ,
Dem. ov, 6, a teacher, master.

-
13. deride, 1221. 26.

605. —
himself, .
dispatch,
4. 2. 17.
I use, comply with, Eccles.
/, to kill
-,
n, ov, learned
didactic discourses, 1. 2. 21.

adv. learnedly, skilfully.


.
instructive-


the Ionic form, I make of use, , instruction, doctrine.
— — — — .1

325
, .», I 32G

,
hletaxoihih»,

,!/ —
.
imp. efclw, I bind, II.
, , a school, Plut.
141.
&W«*X/ov, salary for instructing, Plut.S.6 7 5.
/, 105. ha.
, a piece of mo-
ney consisting of two Attic drachms, about
,
.
1.

John
aor.

6. 18.
1.

roused myself— rise with the wind, swell,

Aisfc^e, Ion. for otsht^e, aor. 1. of lixouxa,

&,
he showed, proved, Herod. 1. 73.
I was roused,

,
fifteen pence of our money, a tribute, Mat. 1. of
Aislo^e, aor. he seemed.

,,
17. 24. hg, -iiha, imp. /?, I see through, distin-

02,
,
flee,
ov,
escape, Gen. 31. 20.
twin— two, two-fold, double
(Ed. C. 298.
, guish, recognise, Plut. 6.
I am seen through, di-
142. know fully,

,

— both hands, Pyth.
testicles.
^,,,
two at a time, Theo. 1. 25.

,,, ,
hlvpoyzvng,
f. or
,
fut.

oqoc, twin brothers

,,, ,
two-fold evils, Septem, 851.

,
twin-born, twin, Helen. 201.

I. shaxtz, pass. ebOdyv, I give, opp. to


aor.
stinctlymarkedjApoll. 1.546.
2. 17.

/>5£/^, f.
the
perf. inf. ///^//, by sync, huhvai, to
see through, know thoroughly, Ranas, 1006.
/5.'>75•,

, bringing forth Aiiih'

,-- ,
transparent, clear water. ,
/,
adv. expressly, O. 11. 25.
At-ertva, I slip through.
escaped unperceived, Apoll. 4. 35.

aor. 1. m.
f. yaa,

having

— /,
or /?/^, p.m. hteix, ^r/jee, plup.
I go
^^,
//,

^,
— — —
,
I receive give a favour, bestow through, penetrate traverse go through
give from my hand, deliver, opp. to h a thing, continue, persevere to the end. ;?;,


give myself up to another, submit, subject (for by dropping thou shalt pass, )
give up a city, surrender give among

the present for the future as is usual with
others, distribute— give back, restore, pay verbs of motion, Acharn. 845. relate to —
— give leave, permit, grant give myself up

the end, Luc. 1. 458. part, liiiav, going
to death, offer, Gal. 1. 4.— give pain, inflict
— give iiower, authorize, give faith to an-
through, passing to, E. 4. 5. 18.
-,
I tell, relate to the end, II. . 425.

other, put, place, Heb. 8. 10. E. 7. 1. 32.

sion —

give fruit, yield give trouble, cause, occa-
give my efforts, exert, endeavour,
explain— direct, Plut. 1. 161.
imp. -),
or Ziss^yov, I sepa-
rate by an inclosure, intersect, A. 3. 1. 2.
/,
Luke
appoint, II. 2.
/,
thoaccu,
perat.
II.
I

=, WC gave, . .

359. subj.
e.
12. 58.

whom they gave


., }>, for
give, -. 537. si £ ksv
for
—give

for
3. 2.

,, ,,
a person over

give, aor. 2. ilovj, plur. fape», for


443.

,^),
if they
TYjy
to me,
, , .,
.
others,

320. im-
give thou,
let us
sh-
for
,

^,
II.
keep off

a. 550.
I
I
— distinguish, Nem.
inquire diligently, ask minutely,

put through, insert,


fraudulent to strangers or
guests, Pax, 622. /ci,
--%?, I pass through, cross, so as to
go out on the other side— pass through
,.
.
6. 4. stQya.

8. 3. 5. siqu*.

gjve, t. 136. optat. loir,v,


give, . 527. ,,, ,., ,,
I should sufferings to the grave, endure, Plut. 6. 422.

, , -^,,
for &»jj, and this for />?, Plutus, 233.
.
, , '), ) /,
II. 275. inf. for to finish a discourse, 0.6. 1
give, II.

having given, optat.


us give, or that we
oolev,
a. 18.
for

,
. 1

//,
16. Od. . 40. part,
for
may give, Od. /3. 336.
may the gods give, II.

,.
let

,
,
Herod. 6. 15.
f.

through the enemy,

contr.

,
i.

the breaking through-


the enemy's line, Polyb. 16.4. 14.— an open-
e.
sail
break their
across, sail
line,

hloa,

,
f. I give,
also liholaOcc, (the paragogic
contr. of ^?:;,
beingadded)
-,, ,
ing to sail through for escaping, E. 1.6. 22.
ov, 6, pipe or gutter, poo;.

,,, ,
thou givest, II r. 270. 164. imp. ilihoov... ,, aor. ^[&,
/?£,
for /,
/.

he gave, II. e. 165. optat.


that ye might give, Pyth. 5. 160.
drive, force through, lici
.
f.

448, for luz -,-, pierced through


••/:
1.

?, I

, , >,
II.
fut. we will give, Od. v. 358. his breast — ride through, II. 4. 4. 1. ;-
give, imp. zoioav...'hiloaoiv, for sh- driving through.
I

-,,
,lozui,
they gave, Od. g. 286. imperat. ;-
by contr. by elision Itlouc, give
-,
, ^, —
f. refute, detect.
I turn asunder, unfold, explain.
draw through — drag out

,
thou, Od. y. 380. inf. to

- ',
'hlova-t, I

— draw through the


sup up — draw asunder, spread out, .
give, Isthm. 8. 132. life, Plut. 10. 277. lips,
I bail,Dem. 1358. pen. — I pledge, 3.

,deliver up as security, Neh. 5. 3. — protract.


10. 7.
—betray, Philoct. 586.
^, ,
Thuc.

-£-:>,
restored
3. 70.

I
on security being

pledge, security, Dem. 724.6.


raise from sleep rouse, oizyu-
-
given,

-,
Herod. 4. 7.
I sell

I
revolve in my mind, Acts 8. 9.
live or survive one year,
svixvTo:.
2
— — — —

-,
327 I 328

-, ,
trouble on account of, harass
I

greatly, Dem. 446. 25.

-,
an explication or dis-
.
arrive at, —go asunder,
reach, exhaust
spread, extend, Theo. Ep. 19.—go through
with the eye, survey — go through numbers

, compute —go

,"
charge of the intestines, ISub. 166. or words, enumerate, relate,

-,

rush out through, Theo. 13. 23.
I go, pass through a place
go through a subject, explain, discuss,
by as time, pass, elapse, Dem. 998.

-,,
25. go
about, traverse, II. y. 1 98. intervene.
I ask anxiously, continue to ask,

peruse, O. 6. 2. Plut. 6. 295. . 1. 3. 13. Dem. 34. 22.
',,
-, ,
Sfsfsa, I send through, permit to adv. advisedly, circumspectly.
pass, lead out, Herod. 4. 52. or -, . —
, ,
pass,

-:,,
f.

Herod.
I drive out through,
4. 52.
hirr,g,

^, ,
two years, 2
during two years,
Mace.
,,
10. 3. Dem. 1135. 4.
for

hi'izkuaic,

Ai-s^s^coftstt,
pass,
I

, driving, breaking through.


unfold, unroll, Herod. 4. 67.
Ai-s%£<*s6f6»f, I ask, seek earnestly, II. ». 432.

go through, arrive at go through in


words, relate to the end go through a
worl^ finish, complete, exhaust, Dem. 19.
aor. 2.



/^ 0oi>, I
-,
-,,
Polyb.

-%,
1 3.

space of two years.

2. 56.
— comprehend,
I set right, rectify,
I discuss,
4.— adjust,

I
or

Luc. 1. 202.
examine, scrutinize,
settle,
distinguish.
am on my
Dem.

guard against,
«j, the

818.

17. —make a trial of, 232. 5,— pass through


sufferings, endure, Thuc. 3. 45.
. -,
carefully shun, Dem.
377. 18. fear.
cause to rest, extinguish, Hip-

Ai-s^vyso/xcii, I fully explain,

-,
At-e%iAifeo/&aui I come through, arrive at.
4. 2. 12.
-,
pol. 1377.
I am
,
very prosperous, succeed
At ov, , a way out through, outlet
a place where two ways cross each other,

Mat. 22. 9. a transit or passage of the sun,

, ,
quite,

,
imp. ^,,
aor. 2. —
rvj
stance, aftluence, Dem. 1040. 5. Plut. 6. 640.

— withdraw, give way, Aves,


success in sub-

,. e. a day, Androm. 1087. the object of


certain measures, plan
ing course, Lye.
go out of my course,
1 4.
wind
,
I divide
— digression, a wind- —hold myself apart/Vow
,
others,
did not intervene, (Ed. T. 736.

1717.
am distant.

,
interval, distance extend be-

-,
I I

, —, , ,
round to the end, Long. 34. tween, Herod. 4. 42.

-,
-,
/,
I spend the whole day

vity, celebrate, Thuc. 8. 9.

distinctly, declare,
aor. 2.
II.

imp. hflxau, follow through, follow


. 9.
I
in festi-

explain
,, , ,.
305,

couplet.
I
toe, disjoined, unconnected.

seek, inquire after, 11. -. 713.


adj. a couple, pair, II.
with double brass,
. 168.
e.
cch.

195.


up follow up an adversary, chase, drive
-, cymbal, Anthol. 2. 447.

,
i. e.

away, 11. . 247. follow up in vjords, tell, I relate throughout, Aves, 198.
manage, II. a. 166. ,
tell abroad, Luke 8. 39.
/, ,
— ,

,
direct, order, administer, 3/>;y/jo7.c,

— follow —
-,
•my desires,

-,
up a execute follow up
zvorh,
indulge, Eur. Elect. 146.
I work through, dispatch.
1 was undone, Heracl. 175.
I excite, provoke envy, Plut.
.
6.
a narration
story

scriptive,

a narrative,
}>,, y, ov, fond
of relating composed of narration, de-
Long. § 27. Plut.
Ai -,, I strain, rack wine, Plut. 6. 384.
8. 41,

226. —
embitter.
/-?(>?/,4:;, I am propped, I prop myself,
lean upon, Hec. 66. contend for, Polyb. 5.

-,
, ,,
wash by pouring water through, Herod. 2.88.
Ainfhpug,
ov,
straining, filtrating, Plut. 5.105.
through the Apoll. 2. 225.
air,

84. 3.


-^,
444.
aor. 1.
wave, Troad. 1249.

explore,
^,
liiQivs/xoficci, I
.
I
.
rowed, Od.

search through,
/u.
Ar/jKovoc, ov, for Ziaxnpoc,
1:/.,
serve, assist,
f.

Ar/ixoaiot, at, a, for


/, ,
I
Herod.

aor.
a minister.
attend upon, minister to,

,, 4. 151.
two hundred.
go, stretch

,
sift, 5. 4. 2. f. 1. /jji*, I

.
-,, ,,,
7>€(>),

Luke 24. 27.
-,
an explorer,
ov, 6,
I interpret
6. 3. 1.
apply a prophecy,
an interpreter.
a,, ov, consisting of earth, (/« ,

, ,)
^^, ,

through
— %\,,
penetrate through, Prom. 133.
I reach, Apoll. 2. 413.
passage across, ferry.
spend the whole day, Pint. 6.505.
-, ^, (, , )
.
humid, wet, opp. to

-,
— quick, Od. 43. /.
pliant, yielding

creep, pass, through, Antig. 271.


I

-,), draw asunder, prohibit,


~., ', I
aor. 2. or /,
allay.
p. m.
At

quence of'naming.

-, , ,
Plutus/720.
or
traverse, 11. -. 475.
,
I go through,

perspire in conse-
wetted,sprinkled ?

continual, uninterrupted,
hihrikvQx, I go through, pass to the end, unbroken, Od. v. 1 §5.•—-entire—fan ex-
— — —a —— — — —
329 I I I 330

, . -,
tended, II. 134. . or hvivsxZg,
adv. continually, in a continued series
entirely, Od. . 386. fr.
&», u. 20. h'irsov,
learn, Hipp. 491.
you must

I firmly maintain, strenu-


separate, sift,

,, . ,
', ;,
ov,
I
throw a bridge over,
}};,,?$
blown over,
make
hilly,
the sea a main land,
Philip. 74.
Trach. 331.
i. e.
ously assert, Luke 22. 59.
-,,, I search through, hunt about.
', justice, equity, right— a» ac-

,.
or fallen tion at law, indictment, cause, law-suit,

,
from the sky, i.
was not known,
AtviPng,
to
,
fit,
eg, ,
Plut. 6. 288.
e.

two-oared. lig, ,
a stream whose source

or ,
trial,

decision
penalty, punishment
without judge or jury
hxrig,
the sentence or verdict ofjustice, judgement,
the consequence ofjudgement, fine,
the principle of jus-

,
an elevated part, vengeance right of sepul-

,, ,
house, Phosniss. 90.
, sounding, elastic, hx,
, ^. i. e. top, of the

,
tice personified,

,
ture, Eur. Supp. 530. hKTtv, adverbially
for hxnv, conformably to justice, like.
,,
,
,
02,
I reflect the sound, Plut. 2. 209.
ov, agitated by two seas or op-
posite currents, Acts 27. 41. hg,
ov, double-edged, Prom. 861.
occupying two thrones, Agam. 43.
ov,

ov, 6, a surname of Bac-


chus, as supposed to have two births
$.
%.

The origin of /*/? is the Heb. ppl, ] being
changed into 1, to bind thus religio means :

that which binds, from ligo, to tie ; and hi,


it is necessary or fit, from ha, to bind, hx -
then denotes the principle of moral obliga-
tion, which is justice. In Od. . 274, it sig-
nifies custom, usage, institution, which it
hymn in honour of him, i. e. a mystic com- is binding on a man to comply with. Ari-

^,
position sung at festivals, and, as among the stotle, who teaches that virtue and justice

/, ^,
most early efforts of poetry, rude, irregu-
lar, and obscure, Herod. 1. 33. he, Svpx.
dithyrambic, turgid, mystic.
,,
are but means between two extremes,
namely, defect and excess, supposes that
own came from h%,x, in two parts, but this
is only one of many instances wherein the

a teacher, maker of dithyrambics, a dithy-

-,
rambic poet, Pax, 829. Plut. 9. 752.
steer through, Leon. Tar. 48. ,,
ancients wrested the origin of a word to
support a fable or a system.
I administer justice, judge,

,
f.

Ai-'ixva, I sleep, repose throughout the

At-iYifAi, ,
night, Here. F. 1049. hx,
f. \, I
.
send, drive through,
decide, determine, pursue, II. a,. 542.
make the subject of legal inquiry, 1.2.
7. enforce by legal sanctions, impeach, pro-
.
— dispatch » secute—rectify, Dem. 652. 24.

, ,
transmit, convey, A. 3. 2. 14.

,
army through a country down, Plut.


let I engageinalaw-suit,try,litigate,A7T. 1.2.51.
8. 575.aor.2. part,

,, :, —
Pax, 1231. Itx, .
having put through,

, inf. to administer justice, sit as


a judge, Herod. 1. 97.
,
,
I go through, pene- a, ov, c. on^og, s. just, equi-
trate, reach, Heb. 4. 12. go through a table, opp. to xliKog —
good, righteous, opp.

,,
discourse, explain, relate.
, or eg, fallen from Ju-
to
able, . 4. 4. 3.
even, equal

competent,
a good citizen, i. e. one

-,
piter or the air, an epithet of a river swollen

',,,.
by the rain, flooded stream, II. q. 263. com.
more pure, brighter, Bacch.
who is equal to his rank or privilege, Dem.
./,.
§ 56. —
true, see note on iiCschin.
fs*. p. 98. — apt. ,-
1266.
, a festival sacred to Jupiter
as protector of the city co- ^,
rights, privileges,

,» ,,
are just, you are apt, to be silent, for
it is just for you to be
<? "hixaioi, you

,^, '
eval with this festival, antiquated, fabulous, silent, Dem. 835, you are

,
,
Nubes, 980. just to pity, it is just in you to pity, and
xi, I fly through, this Attic idiom is very common, hxxtov,
pierce,
Plut.
II.

143.
2. 99. see —
,
fly away,
,,
abs. n. justice, equity, right, sub.
more

,
1. 1, it is just, adverbially,
](,
f.

part.
, ,aor.
for
imp.
1.

-, ,,
/iyjjy, aor. 2.
hfsyxoi, perf.
I stand apart,
asunder or at a distance, interpose, or pass
between, Luke 22. 59. aor. 2. dual. lia-vi-
)?• —
pcrf.

,
just,
justly,
rightly, Plut. 9. 116.
}.(,
most justly
with justice or truth

a righteous judge.
ov, 6,
a righteous judgement.
xg, sj,

,,
o^ixxmc, adv.
— deservedly,

,
tyiv, for separated, i. e. no longer
}>i$<?y}tyiv, I plead my own cause, de-
common
concurred in a

certain distances,
self,
cause, II. x. 6. set

open, give way, opp. to


-,
at variance, divide, E. 2. 4. 25.— station at
I separate my-

II.
",
fend myself, Plut. 6. 224.
those who plead causes, forensic pleaders.

Plut.
xg, ^judicial pleading, defence,
a. 4 35.
— — — —— —.

332

.
,331

,
&jc«-f
state,
<—£*>,
Pyth.
/c,

act righteously, Plot.

^-, ,
1. 13. 3.
sac, adj* cultivating justice, just
8.

{)
31.
I
6*.
practise justice,
514. Arist. Rhet. ,
,,
tres.
a rock reflecting the blazing fire from
its double brow, Phoen. 236. ;;,
Aixpxvov, ov, a two-pronged instrument.

,
,
having two thrones or scep-
Ajax, 251.
— {,
ov, having

,
v>„ the practice of justice, ov, contr. ovv

, •.
a righteous conduct, Plut. 6. 4. two prongs, forked, K. 9. 1 9. Apoll. 4. 1 6 1 3.

7>77•/).,
,), , -, ,
a just action, A. E. g. 7.
, compe-
ov, a stake forked at the head, K.

,
V, 10. 7. /5•,

tence to fulfil all the offices of justice or ov, two-oared galleys, Tphig. T. 408.
all the duties of humanity, righteousness, —-marked by two wheels, rutted.
,
justice, equity— fidelity, mercy, truth, Acts
17. 31. —
righteous institution, or an insti- ,', ov, a net, Od. . 355.
ov, woven like a net, net-like

,,
tution calculated to answer the ends of
virtue and truth, Mat. 3. 15.

,
,,
folds, Antig. 358. yJha&ca.
I throw, fling, Orest. 985.
. — scatter

,
f. pronounce or prove a per-
I upon, Pyth. 9. 21sT Heb.
son just, justify —
defend, do justice to ve- — two-oared galley, ",

,
ov, x.wzy,
Tim. 3. 16. pronounce justice on—
,
rify, 1 Alcest. 253.
the innocent, acquit— pronounce justice on I row with both oars, Eccles. 10S3.
the guilty, condemn, punish, aor. 1. ovx, ehi-
they did not think it just, Herod.
, , rowing
ov, 6, jj, one who
with two oars.
says one thing and
I. 133. imp. eOiKxisv, for soixxiov, he ap- means another, double-tongued, 1 Tim. 3.
~, ,
,, ,
proved, thought it right, 3. 118. demand,
Pint. 3. 667.
acquitted, released,
:{,
to —
Rom.

sentence ofjustice on the i?i?wcent, acquittal,


I
6, 7.
am

,
justified,

,

the
,,
, .
8.

A<>
ferings,
^-,
repetition.
ov,
repeat, lor. 8. 2.

.
doubly armed, two-fold suf-
Agam. 654. /c,
ov, having two crests or cliffs, An-
justification— redress, compensation
sentence ofjustice on the guilty, condemna-
tion,

,,
141.
1. ——
punishment
just institution,
a just claim.
,
the

— a just claim, Time.


ordinance, Heb.

judicial, forensic
1.
9.

— sophisti-
,
tig. 1139. hs,
ov, the space of

o)px, Polyb. 6. 34. 3.

hy.v-, adv.
AiuoiPo;,
ov,
two months,

worth two minGD. /;,


at two minaD, Herod. 5. 77.
having a distinct or a double
scil.

',
ov,

,
ov,

cal—fit for the bar, Air. 1. 2. 48. portion, hpioiga xxx.ee, the evils of disunion
ov, minister ofjusnee, magistrate. between brothers, Septem, 853.
II. a. 238.

-,
h&eurirohtx,

-^,
,
administration of justice.
ov, a judge, Eur. Supp. 252.

hftafUQiov, ov, ro, a court of justice, a tri-
, f.
, —
.
Supp. ad finem, of evil that
which is partly good, and partly otherwise.
r„ a double portion, Ay. 5. 1

, fovsva hvivsasca, I move,

-, ^,
bunal, A0.3. 7.


petty tribunal.
ov, qualified to preside in a court
turn, whirl round, II. . 541.
for efavwsv, Hipp. 1459, he rolled his eyes
ehvxasv, Dor.

of
,-, ^, ,,
justice,

, /, ,,
ra
the fee of a judge—
adv. judicially, in a judicial form.
judicial costs, to orviouai, I turn myself, go round about
a place, traverse, Od. /. 153.
a whirl, a turn-

,
'hix.ihiov, ov, to, a petty suit, Nub. 1108.

,,
», , ,—
AixsKhx, ,, , an instrument driven with
both hands, /?,

horns, /c,
a pitchfork, spade.

,,
ov, 6, a digger, Luc. 1. 115.

^£,
-, .
ov, having two

261. Agath. 29.


ing round, lor. 3. 11,
livr„

,,
, , ,
380.
,
a whirlpool, vortex, Od. . 116.
ov, , a whirlpool, a whirlwind, Nubcs,
dizziness— area, rotundity.

of whirlpools, II.
sv, whirling round, full

.
125. eddying, Cycl. 47.

,,, .
, , doubly barred, folding doors, Od. rounded, inlaid all round, Od.
y, ov,

q. 269. r. 56. capable of turning round, Apoll. 3.42.


a pleader, lawyer, «. 350.
ov, Aio, for 6, or /» , on which account,

,,
, 7\oyn>j,
ov, 6, , a pleader, Plut. 10. 287.
I plead at the bar. ,--
to the engaging in judicial causes.
, , , ,,,
wherefore, quare, ideo, quapropter.

-, hurled by Jupiter, (Ed. C. 1534.


— — ^, ov,

, .,
A. R. I. 1. 11. judicial born of Jove, nobly born,
ov, adj.
pleading, fr. o*ix-/j, ". II. a. 489. Bacch. 122. Hes. a. 430. Hipp.560.

patch up law-suits, am litigious, Atooo!7roPS6), I pass, journey through, tra-


Nub. 1485. •
verse. /«, Herod. 8. 129.
or on, having two -(), ov, t], a way through, a passage
tops. 7%(~ 7~~ - orbit, Prom. 1057. —
passport, Aves, 187.
— — — —— — — —
333

,
hohvtu, f. unfa, I pass, march through, tra- ,. conj. wherefore, because, /, ,
334
,
, |—
-,,
verse.

-, f.
/st,

adv. for
, Luke
lament greatly, Dem. 1 249. 1 9. Ai
I

/oc, from Jupiter.


I open widely
open the jaws, gape, Eccles. 849. open
the chambers of wealth, squander, Plut. 10.
8. 1.

Rhes. 741. Plut. 1. 87.


ov,

, ,,
,
-, ,
, a commander, inspector,
one who looks
through, an epithet of Jupiter as an ob-
server of all things,a spy, 11. *. 562. fir.
4. 8. 7.

.
,

-,—
410. open the throat, slaughter.
live in detached villages, E. 5. 2.
,
1 look through, survey, Ajax, 307.

explore, II. . 451. inspect, Dem. 929. 20.
5. live apart from others
O.
Dem.
2. 13.

hoiKYioig,
;,

35. 26.

, —
manage a house,
direct the public weal, govern,
train, discipline the body.
^.management, administration.
— ,, a glass to see through.

,
-,
,
see through,
Plut. 7. 757. A. 5. 3.
discerning, Luc. 2. 268.
perceive, descry.
1.

,
one who presides over I am very angry, am enraged,.
the civil list, or governor of the city, Dem. Plut. 6. 681.
238. 14. a, ov, two fathoms long, K. 2. 6.
hoixviTYic, , a manager, controller, stew- 1 express rightly, Eur. Supp. 417.
ard, Plut. 6. 684.
(-),
6,

separate my abode— disperse


At -, — I correct —
adjust, Helen. 1174.—

,
repair, rectify errors set right

,
castigate

)
I
the inhabitants of a house into detached against danger, guard against— state rightly,
villages, E. 5. 2. 7. Olym. 38.
a, ov, (from the eye must
—the
7.
, vj, the setting fight a brolen

,
be carried over, must be made to survey,

-,
Phcen. 272.

-,,
,,,,
182.
I shoot through, Od.

I am
102.
pass through life, Eum. 311.
perished,
.
undone, Orest.
,',
limb
correction
9. 10.

^,
348.
At -,
ov,
rectifying

v\,

I
whatever
— amendment, reformation,Heb.
a corrector, reformer, Plut.
ov, corrective.
is

separate two things


wrong

1.

by

-' a common boundary, fix the limits— distin-

,
thunder-struck, vE.Supp. 162.
— — — —

,
I slip through let guish— define speak with precision set-
slip,Polyb. 20. 7.— slip through the fingers, tle, (Ed. T. 742. 1 102.— hoQti-, ex., ov, to

-,
-, , ,
Anacr. 44. escape, Nubes, 433. it is necessary to de-

, aor.
^, }>\ — /?&, p.m.
be defined

-,,
fine— , definition.

-
f. 1 .

/&«, m.
aor. 2. I destroy en- I hasten through, pass over.
tirely — loose, abandon, forgo the advan- aor. 2. pass,
tage of, ruin,
/> , ', (Ed. T. 326. — the tenses /- yy\v, I

',break through, break open,


dig,

*,
,
7\oihct, have a neuter or Luke 12. 39. lay open, scrutinize, perf.
am

-, quite undone, I pe- Attice for


intransitive sense, I pass,

,,,,
rish, am ruined, 233. we have been dug through, are undermined
I sustain an even elevation, or corrupted, Dem. 1111. 2.

-,
Long. $ 33. preserve the same tenor.
— Oiouoopcci,
swear solemnly —
aor. 1.
affirm or
m.
,1472.
I continue to

divine, (from )
dance, Vesp.

divine in
deny on oath,
I

wilt swear upon the palladium, swear on


thou ,^, lot, lov,
nature, incorruptible, as salt
II. . 214. pure, serene, Od. . 540. divine
is said to be,

the bible, Dem. 1 1 60. 2 5. attest by the most in power, vast, immense, mighty, formida-

,,
:-,
solemn oath, Plut. 1. 239.

',
I promise, confess,
stipulate among
. 3. 5.
themselves,
,.
ble,

,,
women.
104. —
venerable, noble, vca-
divine of women, most excellent of

, ,, , ,
E. 4. 2. 7. given by Jupiter, Septem, 955.


,— hof/.o^oymtg, ,
treaty, Polyb. 3. 27. 9.
agreement ,,, •,
a sign from Jupiter, a porten-
tous storm, Acharn. 1 70. a prodigy.
,, Bacchus — ,,
the twin sons of Jupiter

,.
a, ov

,
,,
Luc. 1. 166.
Bacchus
of Bacchus, Her. Fur. 891.

Bacchus, Bacchanalian

3. 516.
a festival of
n, ov, belonging to
I ce-
lebrate the rites of Bacchus, carouse, Luc.
,
,, ,and Leda, i. e. Castor and Pollux.

-, ), ,.
since,
conj. because — that

noble, renowned,
,
(for
inasmuch as,
1. 2. 54. Rom.
divinely born

1. 21. lice,

and educated,
Od. y\. 4 9.
distinguish, teach to
.

-,
I
from Jupiter, an image
eoc, fallen
of Diana supposed to have been sent from
heaven, Acts 19. 35. , . distinguish,

a garden, Luc.
Herod. 4. 42.
I convey water through,

2. 96. . I water
—— —
335 A 336
-),
,
1{7-
&,
-),
,
-,
I disturb,trouble greatly.
to be teased or importuned.
I fortify by drawing a trench across,
Polyb. 5. 46. 3. ,
chariot bands, i. e. armed chariots each
drawn by four horses, fag, Pers. 47.
/c, adv. twice, bis, Eur. Supp. 1081.

eog, twice to die,


,,
.,.
22. Svqaxa.

,
, for

, .,,
407. —
T. 323.
, seeing through, perception.o5rr<y.
12, twice, two.
ov, two spans long, K. 2. 5.
ov, hurled with both hands, Ajax,
two drawn sivords brandished, Iphig.
,
202,
,, *•6,,
the sun.

hurl.
,
wielding two sceptres,Agam. 43.

hence

x*x§
ov, o, a.quoit,
disk.
f. I
Od. &. 129.— orb of

play with the quoit,


,,
xhpx, Ion. 1 268, he shall throw
i. e.

",
£, , ,
,
,
two hundred
ov, consisting of
feet, A. 4. 3.
,
two cubits long.
two plethra, or
1.
,,
himself like a quoit from the rock.
^,, the throwing of a quoit,
a fling from the battlements, Troad. 1121.
-
~, I double,
double woven, II. y. 126.

is double or two-fold, Ajax, 268.


that which

fcoti, I am doubled, augmented doubly,


'- ,
,
/, ov, a quoit's throw, eg

II. -. 523, he was left behind the

cast of a quoit, ogo^-, a boundary.

, ,
,
ui, two royal commanders,
,.
,,
Eur. Supp. 789. two sceptred chiefs, Ajax, 390.

,
^ixT^xliog, ov, double cloak of the Cynics.

,
,
,
^\,,
the distance
ov, Ion.
double, two-fold, A. 4. 1. 11.
/^?,
twice so much,
/sr-

to ride double the time or twice


adv. doubly, twice
as much, in two-fold proportion.
I double, Ay. 5. 1.
,
,
,, ,
or
twice ten thousand, vicies mille.

f.
y\,

twin, two, (Ed. C. 3 SO.

ov,

I
ov, double, two-fold,

adv. two-fold, twice, again.

Plut. 6. 227. Mat. 14. 31.

,,
/- ,,
of two
am
syllables, dissyllabic.
divided in mind, doubt,

, ovv, double,
/ , -,
ov), oov, contr. /c, hesitation, debate, division.
two-fold, twice as much, 1 Tim. 5. 17. neut. consisting of two rows, composed
/5, ;•«, of two verses— -,
a distich.

,,
plur. contr.

,
to lament doubly, i.e. greatly, (Ed. T. 1 328.
— double in mind, crafty, cunning, opp. to
. 4. 1. 14. to
ceit, duplicity
Mat. 23. 15.
abs. de-
two-fold more,
. -,
ov, two-robed sisters, i. e. twin sis-
ters, (Ed. C. mo. 5->.
ov, having two mouths, Polyb. 34.
10. 5. two-edged siuord, Heb. 4. 12. two-
angled roads,i. e. where the roads intersect

, <?.
</37,
/,
/>, f.
/.,
oj, duplicit}',
Jj,

— —
ambiguity.
a doublet.
— /'//, ± Agam. 836, I
double, render double give a double por-
',
each other, (Ed. C. 955.
Aia%ihioi, two thousand.

-,
17.
ov, of two talents, Dem. 329.
worth two talents, Plut. 5. 37.

')(, ,
tion, Rev. 1 7. 6. deepen doubly, E. 6. 5. 1 9.
a duplicate, a state letter, of
twice watered, two relatives to
ov,
be moistened with tears, i. e. each to be
.
which a duplicate was taken, one being
-,
bitterly lamented, Septem, 987. fag,

,
,
sent as containing dispatches, the other
deposited in the Archives, diploma.
,
,
-,
,
f. ,
purify from dregs, strain,
I
Mat. 23. 24. rack wine, lix, i;A/£y,Plut.8.765.
, awake, am roused from
,
two feet in dimen- sleep.

,
fairohog, ov, f.

, ,
sions, O. 19. 3. a, ov, double, two, Herod. 1. 18.
6, two-footed, , -. I seek by feeling, catch, II. -. 747.
,
'/},

between two seas, Troad. 1097.


ov, y, a goat skin —a shepherd's
bimaris, Hor. lib. 1. od. 7.
^,
cloak, —
pouch parchment, Herod. 5. 58.

-, —,
^,
ov, between two rivers, i. e.
02, ov, one who wears a cloak of skin.
Thebes, Eur. Supp. 621.
ov, having two faces, scil. Janus.

,,
ov, twice folded,
Od. v. 224.—two, twin, Iphig. T. 1289. ;-
fruit
<,
ov,

ov, 6, for ,
bearing two producing
twice in the year, Eceles. 703.
a carriage which
bears two persons, a chariot-box, seat, cha-

,
having done this twice,
having wrapped them in a double caul, II.
a. 461. , ,,,
riot, Od. y. 324. II. . 354.
1{, 7j, a seat, Theo. 14. 41.

, a chariot or close carriage

,
Aiqkx,
ov,
loct. 975. fag,
AikCqoc, ov,
having two gates or doors, Phi•
why.
twice baked having two or —
double lights, brilliant lamps, Ranee, 1406.
, a fountain at Thebes, II. r. 401.
of Dirce, Dircean, Antig. 105.
ov, having two shafts, ,,
, used by women of rank.
(),
1012.

.
f.

,
I ride in or drive a chariot
—glide over the sea in a chariot, Androm.
he carried in his chariot,
diffused, Eur. Supp. 991.
, the art of driving a chariot,
6. 1. 16.
,,
/,
337
——
I

traversing theheavens in a chariot, Ajax, 868.


I drive in a chariot, Ajax, 856.
———— — —
1

, , a charioteer ,
,
, ov,

, — h -^,,
,,
7j
of two colours, Luc.

am
——

to, thirst,
1 .

drought.
— I long
338
28.

,,
I thirst,

,
f. thirsty
}):> , , driving, or skill in driving for, Mat. 5. 6. . 4. 6. 7.
the chariot, Olym. 3. 66. h -, xlo;t q, a thirsty soil, Apoll. 1. 11 47.
~(%, , a coach-box, Nubes, 31.
o,

ov, o, a chairman I

&, — venomous serpent lecherous or rapa-


cious harlot, Philodem. 22.

,
carry a litter or a chair, 6
one who is borne in a carriage, a grandee,

,
Herod. 3. 146.
,
, ,
fern. adj. divided in mind.
,',-,
different in nature, Pint. 7.
, .
— scorching
Plut. 490.
,
ov, parched, scanty, Luc. 1. 124.
ohuvx, the pain of thirst.

Rhesus, 417. Antig. 252.


6.
heat,
, thirsty, parched

, ,,
737.— of two natures —monstrous, Trach.
—two, Agam. 480.
1 1 1 1.

^, ^, adv.
into parts — apart — without
1

two ways, in
,,, I. 8.

II. .
I
, double-minded, unstable, Jam.
from
run,
251.
&,
flee, imp. hov, for ihov, I ran,
drive, repel, . 162.
to separate —
each other,

, ,,
fau,
how
from both
,
&,

,/, ',^{ ,- ,£
opposition to
differently, in
— doubt
A?r. 4. 4. 8.
two ways, /,
sides, in
Prom. 935.
in - ^, or
agonizing, Trach. 790. olvvvj.
ov,
I thrust through, Poiyb. 22. 11. 17.
— aor. 1. m.
push through, reject, beat
^,,,

,. ,
different, I
. —
Mat.
f.

10. 35.
cut asunder, cause a division,
,, division.
,
off,

555. 18.
7. 5. 15. defend against, Dem.
ward off, Herod. 9. 88. hx,

.
,
ov, cioven-footed I goswiftly through.
,,
or

^,
toes of pigs.
€uiff/i/,clovengaitorfeet,Bacch.739.S/.c,%>;X>7. drive —pursue game,
run, hasten

, -
—chase
pursue an
— pursue
enemy,
an

,
/, , or I divide the hoof.
said of the full moon, as equally
dividing the month, Ion. 1 56.

,
offender,

,
prosecute,
tor, plaintiff—pursue a
I am pursued — I
the prosecu-
work, urge—
urge myself, hasten,

,
;,
,/,
ov, double, II. t. 411.

malignant, Olym. 8. 140.

Plut. 6. 38.
dissentient
hx&ahx,
adverbially, in two ways, in two parts.
ov, having an opposite desire,

distracted,
I dissent from,

,
,is

, , ,
, -,
/,
,,
S. Elect. 877.
,
ov, to be pursued
necessary to pursue, must follow.
a pursuit, speed, Orest. 989.
, — ,
it

pursuit, rout, chase, Orest. 41 2. Call. 3. 194.

-,,
, 9],

, ~\,,,
/,
A*\ 2. 6. 21.
,
a measure consisting of two
chcenices, Nubes, 640.
fern. adj. di-

. .
, a persecutor, Tim.
1 1.13.
o:/,boundby an oath, Philoct.602.
, an oath taken by the accuser
and the accused. That of the former alone
viding the month into two parts, Plut. 8.

,
615.

,
—on the evening of the full moon,
Isth. 3. 35. —
vj, half of ,
,
,
,
was called

/, ,
.
that of the latter
"bix,

mother of Venus. ofDione. //?,

,
the month, full moon, Sir. 39. 15. ov, having two names, honourable,,

,
,
6, , prevaricating, Orest.
888.
discordance, Plut. 6. 259.
jj,

ov, consisting of two chorei.

, , .
Phoen. 699.
ov,
hi;,

having two roofs or


adv. definitely.
stories.

'-, .
, —
Her. F. 1008.
,
split in two, shattered,

adv. with divided impulse, par- , ,


, ,
,water to run through, a canal, aqueduct.
subdue, bring into slavery.
, a place dug for

,
-,,
tially, Agam. 359. unanimously, 824.

-, I disagree, separate, Med. 1 5.

, schism, discord, Dem.423.4.


ov, cut in two, equally divided.
}>), ,
also
,,
subduing, taming.
q,
all-subduing night, 11. . 259.
ej,

',
, a female en-
slaved by conquest, a female servant, Od.

,,
,,,
60. Andr. 137.

,,
I cut, lop off, Mat. 24. 51. is full r.
moon, Plut. 9. 674. a man servant reduced to slavery.

, , % 6,

,
a segment, section.
ov, consisting of two times, long.

- , . 02, , was a hired servant.


darkness, distress, Choeph..

,
6,

6, , divided in mind. 50. for or

. ~,
,
by a discordant death, Septem, for I darken, cover,
wrap around, Od. . 512. avlga tt'
902. i.

f. ,
e. death occasioned by discord,
I dissent from, am at va-
riance with, Plut. 9. 60.
one man assailing hisadverttary,
blinded him, i. e. pushed the shield in his
r,;, ,
dissention, discord. face so as to blind him, II. . 472. Damm
— — — — —
339

,, however interprets it by to
,, ,, ,
strike with great I try, examine, - 34

,
f.

force, and derives it from to whirl. we have been on found worthy,

-
trial,
a, dark,
ov, black 1 Thess. — think approve—
2. 4. distin-

. , -, ,
fit,

,sorrow, or a funeral clad in black

,,,
a stream flowing deep and dark,
or fretted by flowing over a rock, II. . 15.
,
decree,Acts 16.14. opinion,
guish, Rom.

view, E. 6. 4. 81.
ov,
— tempt, Heb. 3.9.—
2. 18.

, ^examination—muster,
examiner
re-

,
, ,,
dogma, an arbitrary precept or rite. censor, controller, Dem.
556. 17.
I decree, impose arbitrarily, ov, an instrument to try, a probe--'
Esth. 3. 9. I subject myself

,
trial, 1 Pet. 1. 7.

,
to arbitrary ordinances, Coloss. 2. 20.

Aioiyv, ,
,
opinionated, dogmatic.
pass decrees, Polyb. 1.81.
6, a felon, Vespae, 1167.
, ,
02,
,,
opp. to

, ,
ov, sj, a beam, log, a heavy offence,
a little fault, Mat. 7. 5.
rafters, wood work or roof.
a rod —
meteor, Plut. 9. 538.

, ,
, a pestle, Plut. 711.
, , ov, long distant voyage — —

,
,
ai, a, and indecl. for two,

, ,
inveterate disease, Od.
.
171. tedious . —

-,
two-fold, double. night, 243.

,,
,
yi, ov, two, two-fcld. in two ov, , a race-ground consisting of

, , ,,
ways, in doubt, II. /. 230. seven stadia a chariot, Plut. 9.— career,
I doubt. Ion. I represent Leon. Tar. 78.

.
,
in two ways, change, Apoll. S. 818. ov, fixed in long sockets, long
.
. spear, Od. /. 1 56. fr.
for it appeared, II. 458,
was doubtful, Apoll. 3. 769. was perplexed.

,,—
appear
f. ,) —
think, determine, decree
hope, expect, II. yj.
is often used impersonally,

seems,

-^,
;

you ? what do you think ?


f.

*«, as it
»,

what does it seem to

it seemed to the apostles, the apo-


stles decreed, Acts 15. 22. to
,
-,
, ,
p. pass,

.
seem,
I
192. This verb
h-

,

II.

skilful to
.
155.
having a long neck, scil. a
swan, lphig. A. 794. fr.
,,having a long spear, ey-

ov, , furnished with long oars


row, Od.
ov, , one who
runs over the
stadium six or seven times, Plut. 7. 896.
ov, long-necked swans.
6. 191.

-.
think again, change one's opinion. This

,, . .
ov, projecting a long shade

,
verb is also used to avoid the appearance
of being positive,
Mat. 3. 9.
.
'^
for ?^, .
long,

02, ,, —
11.

,
346.
ovoc, long-minded, tedious.
deceit, guile,
— }>',
John
, 1.48. dolus.
for
learnt, or
,, for , ,, ,, ,,, ,
yoOyfASU»,

which appears to a man,


Dem.
1. 1. 5,

have been informed.


9. 15.
what we have

his opinion, de-


that
ful,
11. 13. Od.
f.
281. .
a, ov
fraudulent, subtle, Plut. 7. 96. 2 Cor.

I act craftily, defraud, imp.


deceit-


termination,

12. 22. h ,
/,
scil.

parts of the body that are visible, 1 Cor.


sub.
the

to others
it does not seem, others do not approve,
, ,
~,
,
sified,

,
•£•,
.
for
Rom.
they deceived, fal-
3. 13.
ov, artful in design.
ov, specious, artful, Trach. 853.
Hecub. 121. those who appear,
men of appearance, i. e. of rank or conse-
quence, Hec. 295. also men who believed
Christ to be a man in appearance only,

, ,,
', ',
, or
ov,
,
weaving wiles, wily Venus.
ij, plotting of wiles, craft.
guile-making, Trach. 845.
ov,
cunning-footed,

, ,
, and were hence called Aokyitxi, Docetce. clandestine, Soph. Elect. 1410.
,
see Gal. 2. 6.
blance, Orest. 236.
per.
appearance, sem-

I observe, watch.
— , , ,
crafty, wily
plot, dissemble, Od. a. 51.
cunning-minded,
I artfully plan,

,
I observe, watch a prey lie in wait disguising murder, murderous,

",
for, guard against, II, 0. 840.
— ", , suspect.
, opinion, sur-
Agam. 1138.—
kill, assassinate, Plut. 2. 198.
I treacherously

,
,
,
,
mise, Troad. 411. (Ed. T. 697. phantasm.

,
,
wise in one's own opinion,
conceited, Pax, 44.
-,], appearance,opinion,E.Elect.747.

, 'h,
, approved, Rom. 14. 18.
ov,
tried, genuine money.
proof, trial, integrity, 2 Cor. 2.9.
adv. faithfully, Persae, 545.
,
~,
,
,
varnish

~, ,
f. ,
assassination.

,,
I decoy,
— adulterate, 2 Cor.
artful

treacherous, Trach. 1067.


. — deceive,
1. 6. 19.

machination, . 1.6.
wearing a deceitful face,

, a poniard the sprit-sail on


the fore-deck.

.
4. 2.
19.
— — — — —— — —

, ,
341

,
OP
. -, , ^^ 342

,
, ,
a gift, Mat. 7. from ha. for war. cctk, a furious desire

,
1 1.

, structure, Apoll. 3. 1391. for battle, Septem, 693.

, an house, Od. . 319.


.
courting the spear, expert

.,
ov, 6, edifice,

,1

,, ,
544.

tate,
f.
,
a builder, architect.
ruinous to a family, Agam.

. 55.— brandish,
I whirl
Pyth. 1. 85.
about— shake, agi-
j

,
., .
in war,

spear,

,, .
Agam.
Androm. 1016.
ov,
118.
by the spear.
toe,
brandishing or hurling the

fallen
a contest in which men fell by the

,
II.

,,
, a thing shaken by the wind, a spear, Troad. 1008.
reed— pipe.

,
the bridge of labouring at the spear, brave
a lyre, Ranse, 235. afflicted by the spear, pierced, Iphig. A. 771.

, .
$, or jjoc, bearing reeds, II. . 576. — besieged, Septem, 171.
,
abounding with reeds, ov, agitated with the spear,
reedy, rushy, Helen. 209. Septem, 159.

,, .
Iphig. A.
ov* feeding reeds, rush grown,
79.
ov, 6, , one who is received as a
friendafterhavingengaged him as an enemy,

,
1 fr.

,
,
green with reeds, verdant a guest of war, a foreign friend, Med. 687.
banks, ,, Iphig. T. 400. —hospitable, CEd. C. 659.

,,
,
n:, q, appearance, semblance, Orest.

,
229. brightness moral brightness, reputa-
tion, glory, opp. to John 5. 44.
a bright image in the mind, opinion, phan-
tasy —
expectation, Herod. S. 4.
,
So^vfooc, o£,o',apolisherofspears.|£iy,Pax,446.

, , f. ,
-,
.
ov, shaking the spear, impetuous,
(Ed. C. 1378.
, arm mighty in
with a spear, 1 arm.
I
battle, Choeph. 156.
-
f. p. pass.

extol— promote, aor. 1. pass,

,,
I cause a
person or thing to appear bright, praise,
he
was glorified, i. e. raised from the grave by
/, ,
,
774.
woes, Ajax, 1207.
the hostile army, Heracl.
of war-inflicted

ov, a spear-bearer, guard, satelles,

7. 39.

-,
383.
— think, judge, .
a signal display of the divine power, John

am deemed, Herod.
1.

124.
1.

8.
glory, ostentation, E. Elect.
13.

,II. 7. 5. 26.

tend,

, ,,
, ,
.,
ov, 6,
I bear arms, serve as a guard, at-
4. 3.
armed attendance,
or ov, ro,
. 2. 2. 3.
a skin, bag,

,
, ov, capable of forming an opi-
nion or conjecturing, A. E. s\ 13.
cask, or sack
,, , ) —
made of skin.
),
— ,
,,
19.
-oc, ov, glorious, celebrated, Deut. 26.

— conceivable, Plut.
make an
9. 31.
ostentatious show, ,
', ,
a wild goat, deer, gazelle, antelope, so called
from its quick sight.
ov, 6 —
,
^. —
ov, ^,, , ) —

,
Long. 23.

,,,
,
bition, excessive vanity, Plut. 10. 529.
a skin, bag, Bacch.
yj,

.
,, ,, ,, 1
,
extravagant am-

76.
Od.

a lunch.
/3.
ov, an evening meal, supper,
20. II. r. 208. and thus differs from
a morning meal, and from

-,
by excluding , obs.
by transp.
— -,
,, , , , .-
—a
dat.
,
f. take a meal, sup, Od. ». 215.
I
supper hour, Vesp. 103.
ov, 6,

, ,
timber, beam, pole, from

,
spear, f. aor. 1. imp.
made of oak — sceptre, badge

, I give, bestow, II. /. 331. see


dart, javelin as
of power, Hecub. 18. a, ov, to be given it is ne-

,
,, ,
,,
Zo^artov, cv, a small spear, Pax, 552. cessary to give, must give.

,, hurl the spear


I ov, 6,

, ), giving, gift, Jam. 1. 17.

,the hurling of a spear, Plut. 1. 220.

, ,.
,,
or
,
a spear thick, K. 10. 3.
ov, taken by the
spear, E. 5. 2. 5. a captive, Ajax, 211.
ov, wedded to the spear, causing
war by her marriage, sc. Helen, Agam. 697.
. , —,
,
Zotikyi, scil.

2 Cor.

02,
sponsible,
, ov,

9. 7. II. r.
ov, 6,
Herod.
disposed to give, bountiful

v),
the dative case.
ov, ', a giver, bestower,
44.

6.

,.
liable to

,
42.
be punished, re-

,
^, ,
ov, hunted by the spear, cap-
tured in war, Hecub. 105.
on, or
war, II. /. 343. Plut. 1. 136.

4.;, ,
ov, obtained in

striking with the spear, afflicting


with war, warlike, Nem. 7. 1 3.
ov, taken in war, Ajax, 145.

spcar-mad, eager
. ,
,
vient,
servant,
slave.

,,
ject, 1
Rom.

Cor.

or
.
Yi,

f.
ov,
6. 19.
4. 6. 2.

9.
, 27.
c.

kidnapping,
I
,
,
servile,
ov,
,
©',

),

reduce to slavery, sub-

...
a, ov, of a slave, slavish.
2
subser-
a slave,
a female

2.
343
2>.
,Od.

,,

,
251.
, vj, Ion.

/, ,
, — —— — —

, ,, ,
the day of slavery,

/^'»?, ,
II. . 463.

,
dragon,
——

i.

f. ,e.
or
——

ou, curled like a


fleecy,
the Gorgons, Prom. 789.
by sync,

,
.
344

,
jj,

,
servility, slavery, Ajax, 957. f.m. plunge in, encoun-
I run,
.
slavish,
, ou, fit
mean,
for a slave, 7. 4. 7.
war with
ter, Herod.
,, 8. 102. from
running, speed, Pers. 247.
for

,
, ,
slaves

,
',
adv. slave-like, with ser-
vility, sluggishly, O. 10. 10.

, ^,
f. ft/ff<y, I act as a slave, am a slave,
Ion.
slave, cowardly, Ajax, 1302.
,
, a fugitive

a little fugitive, Mosch. 1.

,
, . , ,:,
serve,

,
,^, , ,,
servile,
,
.8. 1. 15.
x, <u>, to be served
it is necessary to serve, must obey.

, service, a slavish tool, Antig. 767.

»,
servility, slavishness,
,,
befitting a slave, slavish,
30.
Luc. 1. 701.
, vj,
10.

pass.

or
f. I fly, skulk away, E. 2. 4.


hand a grasp a handful, see Biel.
aor. 1. m.
deserting
the standard of philosophy, Plut. 6. 169.
, the hollow or palm of the

I catch with the hand,



p.

,
, reduced to slavery, treated
ou, grasp, II. u. 393. apprehend, inclose as
as a slave,
, Hecub. 448.
,
), , with a net, 1 Cor. 8. 19.

,or
I. 95.
f.

, , , ,
slavery, bondage, Herod.

I reduce to slavery, subject,


render tributary, E. 4. 8. 2. '^,
skinned, flayed.
,
II. -. 169.

, a drachma, six Attic oboli,


or seven-pence threefarthings of our money.
by excluding , p. hl(>x-

,
f.

",
made a slave to, devoted, Titus 2. 3. xx, I act as a servant, serve, administer

, ,,
,,
,
^, ,
slavery, subjection, Thuc. 2. 10.
^,
, a sound, noise a clash of

,

act in life,
make away, flee.
lead a life, live—do, perform
Od. o. 316, contr.

,,

, ,,. ,
arms, II. . 634. whiz of an arrow, of for I would do.
a roar of thunder ahum or clatter- — for contr. of they do or serve,

,
,
,

,
ing of a multitude, 323. ou, to be dene.
f. I sound, roar, fall, II. v. 426.

, an action, a theatrical re-

,,
, ov, made of wood, presentation, play, drama n>
wooden, Troad. 14. %opi>, timber. ou, fit for the drama, dramatic, full of ac-

,
^, ,
,
,
II.
,
spear,
.
^^, , ,
357.

,. ,
,
renowned

%,
a spear's throw,

the spear, a captive, II. t. 343.


,
, a cavity in a
ceive spears, Od. x. 128.
,,
in arms,

an entertainment, feast.
,
, famed

ou,
II.

obtained by

,. ^. }>•, , -,
,,,,
for his
.

pillar to re-
645.
tion, Long. §

(from fut. of
9.
, , a dramatic writer.
,
a dramatic exhibition.
),
I desire to

do, am bent upon perpetrating, Ajax, 326.

, ,
ou, fit for action,
action, achievement, Septem, 556.
Ion.
,
, flight, Pers. 360.
,
}>)

a prompt agent
_

-,, , , —
,, receptacle, repository, inn.
n> ou, oblique, cross, '- -,— minister, man-servant, Od. sr. 248.
ou, fit for acting, strenuous, ef

,
,
aouTi, they two, scil. the two boars, rushing
oblique, with an oblique force, II.
— winding, Alcest. 1003.
148. .
, ^,,
cient
"&, ,
•;, ,-,
violent, daring, Orest. 1556.
),a maid-servant, Od. r. 345.
attendance, Od. o. 320.

,
,
, ou, oblique, transversely, II. mow, reap, crop, aor. 2.
1 6. f. I
,
, ,,
cross-crested, Septem, 1 1 5. -ou, part, having culled, Pyth.
,,a measure equal to the palm or

,
4. 231. I reap for myself, reap
breadth of the four fingers, Equit. 318.

\, ,
, handful, II. ,
. m. -»,
the advantage, enjoy,
part.
Dem.

. 357.
10. 9. aor.
having
1.

, ,»
c. 552. grasping, Cycl. 169. culled for myself, II.

,bind in sheaves,
f. aua, I
f.

%%xxxiux,
I
.
gather corn in handfuls,
. 555.
act, project,
— a ser-
II.

.
,,
. 96.

,
>;•/,
chion,
, , Z^auou, a
II. a. 551.
chariot with a scythe fixed obliquely to the
ends of the axis, A. 1. 8. 7.
sickle, scythe, fal-
, a war
.
, '
pent,


II. .
308. h. dragon, fr.
o(>ax.ouT(ou, a little snake
of a serpent.
o'gxxouTe^, x, ov,
l(>xxouT£jau, Phoen.
1325, from the craggy cave of the dragon.
serpent-like, fierce, Pint. 8.
serpentine, Pers. 256.
}
the snaky sisters, i. e. furies.
] 80.
~
, , ,
bitter, opp. to
fe??z/>er,choleric
— piercing
keenlv.
,,
like a sickle or scythe,

\,—
a scythe or sickle maker.
, ou, sharp, acid,
sour wine bitter
quicksigkt
pahi
acute thought
—^, —
. adv.

sharply,
— — ——

,,
345

002, ,
ground, Od. .
6,
APT
, bitterness,
speed
605. ?

acuteness.

,
race-course open
,
, —
I

,,
)
or rails
, (for
AT
, , a wood-cutter, Plut. 898.
the balusters
which encompassed the court of
justice — the bar of the senate, Equit. 672.
8.
346

, am
from
carried from
my right mind,
my right course, I stray
Prom. 593.
— unrestrained
for
^,,, 5) f. (Damm derives

, ,
verb from

,
echo;, fern. adj. fleet this to tear the skin,
— wandering, Hipp. 459. substantively, a
swift species of camel, a
ov, running, rapid,
dromedary.
,
peel. It is written also
tear, lacerate, bruise, aor. 1.
I lacerate myself, tear my own
m. -,
cheeks, Od.
I

steps of the hare in full speed, K. 3. 8. . 153. imp. they tore them-
effected by running or attended with wan-
/,
selves, II. 3. 1. 8.

, ,,
derings, Her. F.
Plut. 9. 117.
1335.— fit to run,

, a runner, racer
one whorunsinthe'publicgames, .3.10.6.
,,, running, speed, rapid course
robust,

—a statue of
\$,
,,
take off the hair with a plaster.

Luc. 2. 392. from *,


to be pitched and tarred,
a plaster.

.—
], sorrow, causing the mind to sink,
grief, Ajax, 951. from the cause of
— running here and there, confusion or tu-

Troad. 688.

,
1>1, for running,
y, ov, fit

mult, Med. 1181. incursion of the waves,

,
, ,
fleet,
, , ^-
, ,,
deep sorroiv, calamity, affliction, Od. f. 215.
>, f. I sink in sorrow.
plunge in distress, Od. . 195.
for ~, -
miserable, Apoll. 4.

,, , , — ,
races, . 29.
0202, , , deWj dew-drop,
7. 4.

,
1165. distressing—
1>\
affliction.
-
,,-—,
Anacr. 43. imp. f.

— —
^,
ros

— , ,,
trickling tears, juice,
yi,
Olym.
ov,
7. 3.

containing dew, drip- right


aor. 1.

— can
I can,
bring
aor.
am able, have power or
my mind to do a thing,
1. pass.

,
,
2, ,
Myrin. 2.
,

ping with dew, dewy cool, Hipp. 108.
a limpid rill, 226.
I sprinkle with dew, Ranae, 1346.
shedding dew, dewy nights.
sj, a tree

, —
oak, a standard tree,
enough of the oak,
am willing,

,,
x. 78.
6

^, , —
mighty or

pacity,
%6,
rich.

Mat. 25.
— military force— deed,
Mat.

he who

,15.
1 6. 3.


— avail, prevail,
power, might, influence.
is strong or able, the

power,
efficacy,
ability, ca-
Rom. 1.
Od.

16.
i. e. of acorns, a proverb expressive of him

,, fact, opp. to

.,
—faculty— xi
,
who wishes to lead a life less rude than
those who preceded him.
% \ the powers of a

,
cento state, governors or magistrates miracu-
Od. . 163, thou art not lous powers, Mark 6. 1 4. by

-, —,^, ,
hewn from a tree nor of a rock, but must force, according to ability, I. 7. 4.

have had some parents, or, as we should f. I enable, Col. 1. 11.


say, thou art not dropped from the clouds. 6, sovereign, po-

^,
^, , ov, of wood or oak, wooden.
,
tentate, 1 Tim. 6. 15. Iphig. A. 280.
^-,
/, ,
,
,, I exercise the supreme
a wood-cutter, a feller of timber.

-,
f.


,,
fruit of the oak, acorn.
-, , — ,,
power, am sovereign reign, Thuc. 2. 102.
the

,,,
forest, thicket.

,,
*, , ,
,, , ,,bushy, woody, Plut. 7. 89.
a wood-pecker, Aves, 480.
oak-bearing, yvja, Thesm. 114.
supreme power, sovereignty, dy nasty, Thnc*
3. 62.
able, powerful, mighty

,
op, c.
— adequate, ,
^, ,
to, a forest, thicket. sc. it is possible.
6, a rain-fowl, Aves, 305. might adv. mightily.
<),, ,
•/, or, ],
ready to drop, ripe, Lys. 564.
\, , a trough as made of
I exhibit
%,
my power, 2 Cor.
cause to sink—go
1 3. 3.

,,/, 7\
f. I sink,
— .

,
oak, coffin, Choeph. 999. a bath. under, enter, II. 99.— sink into the heart,
7\ —
/ " './
yxQ

,, //) (read
scil. Clytemnasstra, dgt/-
penetrate, pierce, Od. o. 347. go under
arms, put on, II. q. 186. go into battle,
engage in, II. . 600. p. hath pene-

tvj)

) rather

,
Him, sc.
Agamemnon, after having enriched himself new verb
,,
trated, exhausted, II. . 811. hath taken
possession of,'/. 239. (infin. of the
is sunk,"set, Theo. 1. 102.

^,,^,
with many costly things, i. e. as presents imp. for— he went under, II.
for his queen, she receiving in a benevolent 3. 271.
bath, i. e. appearing to welcome him with }>,
I sink, aor. 1. m. he put on,
affectionate attention, shrouded, entangled, II. y. 328. imp. for they
in a robe while he was passing to the tent entered, o. 345.
at the brink, iee Wakefield's note. hvao^tx:, fut. of *;,
used as a new verb,
347
,
I enter, imp.

,
, or
2

for tovasro,
the sun was set, Od. , 321. U. >?. 465. im-

, ov,
ous, Antig. 363.
hard to lodge

,
2

\*— disastrous
in,

incommodi-
348

contest
perat.
/,
put on thy might, r. 36.
I sink, put on, II. . 202. imp. >/ for
ehuvs, put on, f. 845. entered, Od. y. 81.
/, ,on the pipe, sc. ig, fr. Antip.Thess.29.
Avaxvhtx, xg, an inconvenient abode, in-
commodious harbour, Agam. 566.

.-.
,
-,
uvuou, for sorroius pierced, II. 268.. eog, difficult to be borne, intole-

,
«/, I sink, imp.
set, 263. Iv, for

, ,,,
o^uuxi, 'hvy.-uxi,

,<—
part. £,
sunk under,
,
to sink into, enter,
having entered.
.
63. was
penetrated, 6. 85. inf.
II. . 85.
,rable, Eum. 140.
ou, difficult to be carried or
borne, Mat. 23. 4.
on, "hvahix^XTog, difficult to be

,
two, gen. dat. //» or Zvetv, dat. plur. passed, impassable, Nem. 7. 143.
ovxg, xhg, sj, the number two, dyad.
indecl. ten two, twelve.
xlog, ij, the number twelve.
pass, Itt£. 8. 9.
am rendered difficult to

y(ciyo,ov,ill-boding, Pers. 1065.


,', .
,
}>v*)h>cxTog, twelfth. twelve times. AvaQov?iog, illadvised, perverse
2, an inseparable particle denoting what- mad intention, Septem, 804.— folly,

,,
xg,

,, ,
7j,

ever is ill, difficult, unfortunate or painful, Antig. 95.


and the opposite of
AvaxyKoptrog, or -;,
.
to be restored, irrevocable, Eum. 756.

or sister.
ou, difficult

ov, o, i), unfortunate in a brother


the most wretched , -,
marriage, Phoen. 1055.
or
, , ill-married,

not easily
tickled, sullen or peevish, lsr. 3. 10.
tg, ,
meanly born, Helen. 1275.
unlawful

of sisters, Septem, 873. xg, , base birth, (Ed. T. 1098.

.
,,
,
Avaxixung, sog, very mournful, Persae, 279.
Ivaxyayog, ov, difficult to be led, stubborn.

, hard-blowing, Od. u. 99. .


Avayuoix, xg, difficulty of comprehension,

^
dullness, Here. F. 1107. fr.
lvayuaa;x, xz, , want of discernment or re-
.
, , ou, very wretched, (Ed. C. 336. collection, Eur. Elect. 767.
Avaxiau, auog, unhappy life, Eur. Supp. 960. -og, ou, difficult to be known.

-^/?, AvolxiyMu, ouog, 6, , having an unhappy

,
for not blessed with the
sun, experiencing a lowering sky, i. e. tossed
by misfortunes, Rhes. 147. ,
genius, ill-fated, (Ed. T. 1325.
am wretched, Long. 9. 7.

',
f.

,,
-,
Avux'hyng,

,, ,, . ,, , .
.
ill to be endured, Agam. 1 1 76.

unfeeling, (Ed. T. 15.


ov, difficult to be captured,
hardly able to escape, (Ed. C. 1801.
IvabxifAouix, q, misfortune,
xg,
wretchedness, Iphig. T. 1120.
ou, sadly to be wept over or
lamented, Agam. 453. fr.
misery,

-,, ', ov, ill-boding, Ran. 1257. 6, having a perfidious wife,

-,
, ,
or unfortunate Agam. 1328.

,
in lot, very wretched, II. .
428. ou, not easily distinguished.
I bear ill —amaverse to Avalix'hOrog, ov, difficult to be dissolved, re-
...
. ,
regard with indignation, Time. 7. 71. conciled, implacable, 5.

,
ou, hard to be borne, intolera- ou, ill-dressed, Eur. Elect. 1 107.

,
ble, Asr. 2. 2. 8. I am
or shabbily clothed.
ill

-(>,
off, 7. ,,,
Ava-ecur-ziTog, ou, dangerous to be met with.

Trach. 976. Plut.


ov, difficult to be shaken

641.
6.
ou, ill to be seated, ruinous to a
house, scil. Helen, Agam. 755. kfyx.
ou, difficult to be washed out.

--, ^,
,
,, .. to be answered.
ou, difficult

ou, difficult to be averted,


inflexible, Plut. 8. 115. Act. 4. 1. 4.
hard to please —fastidious,
3. 13. 3.— morose, Eum. 931.

^,
*,
.
tricable,
ou,

or to cross, Hipp. 678.


ou,
hard to be loosened, inex-
inextricably,
ou, difficult
fr.
Prom. 60.
to pass through,

difficult to pass the lips,

,
to be displeased. unutterable, Hipp. 883.
I dislike, Polyb. 3. 26. 6. am — ou, difficult to be refuted.
— }>-

,
displeasing— am displeased with y^7^v^,unhappy or infamous Helen, Orest.
,,
-,,
. ,
,I am offended with, 5. 94. 2.
ovaoi^wig, sat;, displeasure, Polyb. 15. 25.

-,
tis, as being
xg, ,
unhappy in giving birth
to the noblest of sons. The word seems to
allude to the compliment usually paid The-
this in a spirit of
22, ,
1389. so Homer

desperate, Plut.

Polyb.
//5
2. 10.
uses

3.
,,

8; 21. 10. 2.
II. y. 39.

hopeless, diffident-
338. Choeph. 410.
am hopeless,! despair,

hard to expect, hopeless,

,,
: -oc, ou,
pique she denies, II. . 54. -og beyond hope, 6. 1. 24. .
Porson,]
ou,

M.
for Ivxg xripovg, [restored
Supp. 441. dishonour.
by
cessible, secure,
ou, difficult to
Thuc. 4. 10.
walk
&.— in inac-
— — — —

,
;

,
340

, . Q», difficult to be invaded, unas- '/, , ,


2
ill-sounding, hoarse, attended
350

, , .
sailable, E. 6. 5. 24. with shrieks, stick as war or violent death,

, ,
.

. . 442.
ulcerated intestines, dysen-
\\, , $.
II. 686.

,, tery, Acts 28. 8. SUTSQQV.


of access, haughty.
ov, difficult II. . 549. from
hardly warm, cold, frigid,

,
',
,
,, ,
,
,
not easy to be deceived.
ov, difficult to be effaced.

ov, difficult to be developed.


ov, difficult to be found out.
ful death, Ion. 1051.
I suffer
Herod.
ov, causing a lingering or pain-

a lingering death, die reluctantly,


9. 72.
f. ,

,
/, .
.
ov, difficult to be untied, inex- ov, difficult to look at, painful to
tricable, Hipp. 1237. fr. the sight, Ajax, 1023. from §.
ov, difficult to be tamed. ov, hostile to, hated by, the gods

, , ,,
.
,
, .
, ,,, ,
4. 11.

ov,
ov, difficult to be ensnared,

Ay.

and
6. 7. fr.
, not easy to be attacked.
for working, said of winter, Bion, 6. 5.
difficult to work, inapt to work difficult
to be effected— difficult to be worked upon,
, inconvenient


impious, Agam. 1601. hostile, Choeph. 188.

143. —
ov, difficult to be healed, in-
curable, past remedy, Ajax, 614.
I die hard, Rhesus, 791.
ov, very mournful, Iphig. T.
doleful, Antig. 1225. fr.
ov, harshly sounding, Pyth. 4. 111.

, ..
-, ,bad materials— ad v. with difficulty. ov, heavy in mind, sad, dejected,
6, q, hard to contend with, S. Elect. 220. grief—

-, quarrelsome, morose, Olym. 6. 33.

- ov, difficult or dangerous to con-


adv. with grief or dejection, sadly.
am depressed in mind,
tend about, S. Elect. 1403.
,,
I grieve, despond, Herod. 8. 100.

-, ,
-, ,
ov, difficult to be explained

or interpreted, 2 Pet. 3. 16.


, , unfortunate in love,
the immoderately ,
-,
Med. 691.
sj, depression of mind, sadness,

ov, difficult to be healed,

anger not easy to be appeased,

, ,, .
devoted to pleasure, Luc. 1. 139.
ill to rest, said of a dove -,,
Med. 520.

, , difficult for horses, Ay. 1. 15.


which is terrified in her nest, when she sees
the serpent coming to devour her young
but it seems better to read
-^, the setting of the sun, west. /».
ov, difficult to be purified or

expiated— implacable, Antig. 1295.

-, , . ,
from to characterize the ser- difficult to be restrained, head-
{>ent as hostile to her bed, thus contrasting strong — difficult to be held, apt to slip, as
lim with her mate, who was the friend

,
an

?., .
eel, Luc. 1. 142.
. and partner of her nest, Septem, 295. .,,, , difficult to bend, inflexible.

,
be in- infested with smoke, Agam.

-,
ov, c. difficult to ov,
vaded, inaccessible, Thuc. 3. 101. 783.

,
.
,
ov, difficult


to be found, scarce,
difficult to be explored,
ov, difficult to be recon-

.,
3. 14. 7. ciled, Plut. 6. 45. fr.

Bacch. 1219. ov, difficult to be compre-


ov, too prone to suspicion, very hended or understood, Plut. 6. 172.

, .
envious or jealous, Od.

traced, K.
,
8. 1.
difficult to

, hard of hearing, from


,,
n. 306.
be sought or

,,
remediable,
Med. 109.

.
ov, difficult

Choeph.

difficult to
to be stopt,
467.

be
— implacable,
set
ir-

to rest,

.
<?.

^
of hearing.
difficulty not easy to be allayed, 5. 3. 16.
^/,— ,
toe, troublesome, officious.
harassing war, II. v. 154. painful —
-, not subject to contempt, .
to be
ov, difficult

1.14. 8.
despised,

,
death,

, .
Od.
-fivioc,

tory, .
ov,
3. 3. 14.
. 325.
difficult to or to handle,
be curbed, refrac- 4. 2. 7.
y-£i^o?,oI/,ill-sounding,screamingten•or,
. —
.ov, difficult to be wrought

,
ov, hardly exposed to the sun. II. 357. infamous, malevolent, Ion.

,, , —

,
"hvarihiov

\,
darkness scarcely illumined
by the sun,cold, dreary darkness, Eum. 394.
exposed to the wind, agitated by
..
1090.

,
doleful, Septem, 869.
q, a bad temperature or tem-

,
perament of body, Plut. 9. 600.
,
.
,
the wind, Antig. 598. fr. exposed to distressing care,
ov, difficult to be curbed, re- harassed by disquietude, Od. . 466.
fractory, Luc. 2. 1 74. fr. ,, ov, difficult to soothe, ungenial,
ov, difficult to be plowed, inara- fruitless, see Wakef. on Eum. 820.
ble, Call. 4. 268. «ego<y. ov, difficult to be moved in- —
,
351
flexible
— —

/, ,
——

,
——

difficulty

of ,, out difficult to
,,

be appeased.

",-
——
352
.

,,
motion, costiveness, Plut. 6. 484. inimical, hostile— an
, (\)
infamous, inglorious adversary, enemy, adv. —

', Prom. 271. opp. to with hatred, in a hostile manner, /

,
disgraceful,

/,
^", ,
..
adv. infamously, ingloriously. those who are enemies.

,
infamy, ignominy, Ajax, 1 43. I act as an enemy,

, ,,
nicate, unsociable,

gruous, Luc.

to learn,
ov,
ov, not disposed to

ov, difficult
2. 16. fr.
hard to digest
difficult, O. 15.
—morose — hard
—irksome,
10.
,
,,
commu-

to combine, incon-

,
breathe hostility, Od. 71.
enraged, Dem. 300. 25. Med. 870.

, ov, hostile, Polyb. 6. 7. 8.


adv. with inveterate rage.
.
I fret, am

sj, ill-will, enmity, S. Elect. 621.

ov, difficult to be changed.


Bacch. 1249.

,
pleasant, peevishness
ishly.

^,
r:
adv. peev-
to be ill-natured, to -,
any thing un-

,
ov, difficult to be transferred,
transposed or changed, Plut. 8. 118.

,
ov, unwieldy, untractable.

,
bear a grudge, Dem. 381.
— f. ,
I molest, fret,
-,
, Isthm. 4. 113. .
, the setting of the sun, the west,

,

\,
,
chafe, Itt. 5. 4. lam peevish, Lysist. 887. I am hardly able, cannot by
,
57. 2.
q, moroseness, perplexity, Dem.

,
,
any contrivance, Agam. 1370.
ov, ill to mix, Plut. 9. 23. -

,
ov, difficult to be modu- adv. hardly to be mixed.
lated, see note on Nubes, 967. to be incapable of mixing or blend-

,
ov, rendering sleep difficult,
wakeful care, Nubes, 419.
ov, difficult to be borne, laden
with misfortune, Her. F. 1422.
ov, difficult
doubtful —hardly discernible, Prom.
-.

,,,
. ,
,
to be ascertained,
ing with.

,
ov, difficult to be remem-
bered, Arist. Rhet. 3. 16.
, , having asad lot, CEd. C.334.
W.ao^oz^wretchedjill-fatedjll.pc.eo.^s^.
, unhappy

,
458. fate, Leon. Al. 29.
— hard to be interpreted, 486.

, , ov, ill-shaped, Helena, 1220.


adv. indistinctly. I am unable ,, deformity, Herod. 6. 61.
to judge.
ov, difficult to be procured.

,
ov, difficult

.,
to be conquered.
ov, difficult to be washed away,

,
,
,,
(for ), I sink under, II. S. 271.
swelling with waves,
ov,
»y wotj/TojJCflf*oi,aheavyseaofills,Agam.662.
i

, deaf and dumb, Exod.


difficult to
to be comprehended,
-
4. 11.
be related, Pers. 699. ,
indelible, Trach. 696.
ov, contr.
2. malevolent, Iphig. T. 350.

,. ,
, ill-will,
ov,
,
ill-disposed, E. 2. 1

reluctance, Plut. 10. 160.—


hard to be understood, 2 Pet. 3.
-,
-,
ov, difficult 16.
~>.
.
subtle,

,, ,
,
,
apprehended,
Long.
ov,
6.

-difficult

for what unaccountable purpose.


to be
?>\?,
Ajax, 40,
computed or insubordination,
-oc,
,
hard to return.
ov,
disobedience to the laws,
Dem. 422. 27.

to plunge them in a perilous at-


^?

,
ov, not fit for the neck, difficult tempt to return, Troad. 75.
to be borne, insupportable, Prom. 939. ,
an unhappy wife, Troad. 145.

'.
Theog. 846. adv. heavily, with , difficult to treat with,

\,
' -,
difficulty, Troad. 303.

,
faithless, At. 2. 6. 3.

,. , , ,
ov, difficult to be loosened, indis- ov, slow to understand-— abs-
soluble —
implacable, Phcen. 378. truse, Phcen. 1510.

,
ȣ, indissolubly.
to be untied or disentangled,
,
not easy
. ov,

ov,
unwieldy, cumbersome.
smelling disagreeably, fetid.

, , -, ,., ^, ,,
,
learning with difficulty, , , difficult to travel.
dull, 6.— hard to be learnt or known, difficulty of passing, impediment.
Med. 1196. ro incapacity of being ov, hard to pass, as being
known, obscurity, Iphig. T. 478. craggy, Eum. 385.

, ,, .
499.

is not,
learn with difficulty, Choeph. 223.


ov, difficult to combat with or to
be attacked, Hec. 883.

fought with, avayxy

necessity, Antig,

tend hard with opposestrenuously,Trach.
I con-

a, on, to be strenuously

we ought not
18,
it

to struggle against
or )—
Rhesus, 805.

-,
I bear ill, (from
doubt, hesitate, (from think,)
I do not shrink

or hesitate through fear, Agam. 1326.


ov, difficult to carry or to be borne,
insufferable, Plut. 9. 299.
ov, difficult to be inhabited, un-
inhabitable, . 8. 6. 10.
— — — —

-,
353

-,
,
-,
, ill-boding, monstrous.
, showering heavily.
a heavy shower of darts, Antig. 365. ,
, -
nate
hardly,
— difficult,
Prom. 758.
Eum.
Ajax,

478, read
1065.— , «
354
ill,

,
,,
,
ov, iil to associate with, a dan-
gerous comrade, Again. 755.
dim-sighted, Eum. 386.oftu.oi.
ov, obscure, Polyb. 18. 4.

ov, difficult to be seen, dark.


. , ^,
, ' .,
.
ble of concoction,
practicable.

or
,
to concoct things not suscepti-
i.

squalid, (Ed. C. 1668.


e. to adjust things im-

,
6, sj, unwilling to

-, .
ov, prone to anger, irascible, Phi- be persuaded, sceptical, 1. 23. W-

,
loct. 381. reluctance, Plut. 4. 363.•—-not easy

,
-, ,
evil

,
,,,
ov, incommodious harbour, diffi-
cult of approach, K. ]0.

omen, Hipp. 759.


6, '/},

ov, dusky, dismal, Phosn. 329.



7.
inauspicious, led by an
fatal, Septem, 840.


,
. , , ,
to be believed, incredible.
sceptically,
lous, to disbelieve, ). ,,
, wandering much, Prom. 913.
ov, contr. ,
hard breathing,
adv.
to be incredu-

,
smelling disagreeably difficult panting, Antig. 230. violently blowing, 595.

,,
to be traced by the scent, K. 5. 3. f. I breathe hard

^, ,
,
stench, Philoci. 897.
q, a difficulty in passing water, .
7\,
,,
9. 20.
difficulty

^^^,
of breathing, panting, K.

,
strangury, the tail.
ov, hardly to be dispelled by the
wind, inextricable cloud, (Ed. T. 1346.
,difficult to be affected, insen-
, , ,
hard to wage war
with, difficult to be combated, Dem. 41. 8.
difficult to be besieged,
strongly fortified, E. 4. 8. 5. \.
^,
,
^,
sible, Plut. 8. 472.

,, ^-,,
flicted — am
I

suffering severely.
deeply suffer, am severely af-
very intlignant, Plut. 4. 239.
, % severe affliction, heavy

,
. 493. ),

, —
toilsome, harassing, oppressive labour, Od.

°,
Antig. 1288.
ov, difficult to pass

— ,
,
,,
sickness, hardness, Plut. 5. 36. over, A. 1. 5. 7; 2. 1. 7.
— ,

,
, ov, hard to 7], difficulty of passing, E. 3. 5. 13.
contend with or to overthrow — , wretched, Prom. 198.

,
unavoid- ill-fated,
— arduous.

, . ).
able, Alcest. 892. sc. Eum. 261.
drink, nauseous,

-,,
s<rt, it is difficult, Pyth. 486.4.

^,
^'/,
miscarry, prove unsuccessful,
I

,
ov, hard to struggle against, the unfortunate, Agam. 799.
Eum. 844.

comparable, Plut.
fr.

ov, difficult

ov,
5. 147.

^.
hard to be supplicated,
,
to compare, in-

,
misfortune, Ajax, 770.
1240.
,
ill-becoming, Helen. 307.
,
miscarriage,

calamity, Her. F.
,

,
,,-,
.,
,.
unrelenting, Prom. 34. ov, difficult of access, inacces-

,
^, ov, difficult to be conveyed, sible, iphig. A. 345.

Plut. 5. 31. arduous, Polyb. 3. 61. , difficult of approach, Ay.9.2.
hard to lie on, cruel, un-
ov,
fortunate bed, Trach. 804. fr. . ward, GEd. C. 1342.
ov, difficult
). to approach, unto-

.
, )
---,
, .
ov, not to be softened by
prayers, unrelenting, Eum. 382.
,
hardly to be appeased,
implacable, M. Supp. 397. Se^ya.
ful, Soph. Elect. 462.

, ,,
ov, difficult

hardly accessible.
forbidding in mien, un-
to look at, fright-

,
\,
-, ,
, , -,
^, ,
ent—ill-trained,

. . /,
unhappy
, 4. 1. 3.— .
adv. in a stubborn manner, reluctantly.

,,
,
Paris,
unwilling to obey, disobedi-

sent by an evil fate, unwel-


come guest, Agam. 1201.

. ,
II.

difficult to cross,
y. 39.

boiste-
seemly, (Ed. C. 260.
,
impatient of cold, Herod. 5. 10.
,
impious, ungodly, opp. to gv-
Antig. 520.—

,
impiously.
I commit impiety, Trach. 1261.

, impiety, ungodliness.
6,vj, difficulttobe saved, wretched,
rous,

,, II.

. . 748. —rough in temper, abandoned, Theo. 3. 24; 4. 45.

, ,,
, , ,
,
causing bitter grief, heavily
grieving, Pyth. 11. 28.

, -, . ,
grieve
sadly, indulge in excessive grief, Plut.
6. 401.

, hard to digest, Plut. 6. 518.


ov, difficult to pass through,
oppressive, tempestuous life, Med. 648.
,
turning out ill, unfortu-
inscrutable,

-/,, Dor.
fltiz/#,verymiserable,S.Elect.236.
,' hard
Prom. 497.

(Ed.

ov, difficult

2
to be conjectured,

unfortunate in one's children.


1279, the
raising of an unlawful race of children.

A
to melt,
ov,
.

verv unhappv
— —— — — —
355 2

,,
,,
A 2 356

,
causing wretchedness, oppressive, Pyth. 4. grieve, am distressed in mind.

478.

-,,
sad, woeful, Rancc, 1367.
adv. wretchedly.
hard to endure, difficult breath-
ing, Phcen. 1447.
-oxoc, ,
, \.
.
, a bringing forth with diffi-
culty, Call. 4. 241.
,, ,,
, or
ov, difficult
against, unavoidable, Phcen. 931.

storms of winter, cold, high, Bacch. 15.

, ov, tempestuous,
,
to be guarded

to be defended, or ill guarded, Polyb. 2. 55. 2.


exposed to the
— difficult

,an ,
}>?),
evil
bearing.
I suffer

brood—
hard labour,
Ranas, 1470, the city brings amiss, produces
,,
ij

difficulty in
Septem, 505, as a wintery serpent,
i. e. a serpent that lay without food through

the cold winter, and therefore now raging

22, ,
with hunger.

--, .
, ike hand,

. -
f. wa, I use a foul tongue, revile, difficult

,
,
(Ed. C. 1041.

., ov,

scrutable, Troad. 885.


difficult to be explored, in-
— dark, ambiguous,
,
,

1412.

^, ,
unpleasant, opp. to
disagreeableness, hardship.

,,
rough, hard,unwieldy— filth}', odious, Ajax,

,
Eur. Supp. 138. ac, unpleasantness, difficulty.

,
J
^

Q'j, rather gemini, twin f. aor. 1. I irri-

, ,^,
brothers, see Schutz on Septem, 987. tate, dislike— reject with scorn or anger,
,
feasting at an evil table or
,. . 8. 6. . 7. 4. 2.

, . ,
on impious flesh, Here. F. 385. (Ed. C. 1347, irritating, offensive words
,
, sj, difficult to be turned, I feel angry or indignant
obstinate, Ajax, 925. — adv. to am hated, held in displeasure,Dem. 1489.7.
be displacedwith difficulty, disorderly. r^fTriJ. adv. with disgust, A. R. 3.7.3.
ov, fastidious, squeamish, Dem. ov, difficult to be brought under

22,
73. 4.
,,
morose, Hipp. 161.
,-,
the hand or power of another, unassailable,
— ,,
a hard

. c. unfortunate, Herod. 7. 9.
— cruel, Pint.
-, ,
unsuccessful, miserable 6. 635. combat, a dangerous conflict, Antig. 128.

\,
,, —
,f.
adv. unfortunately, Andr. 576.

ful, miscarry
I am unfortunate, unsuccess-

am unhappy or distressed. ,,
from
,
a shabby dress.
shapeless in ill clothing, dis-
.-
, ?-/?,
Phcen. 42. 7. ion. 849.
— ,
,, ,
things adverse, casualties,

'/„ misfortune, miscarriage,
guised in tattered clothes, Hec. 240.
ov, difficult to be used, distressed,

embarrassed, Polyb. 4. 11. 8.— incommo-


-
, .,- ,
,,
, , ^,
calamity, distress

dark night,

<,
,,

slaughter, E. 4. 5. 19.
difficult to appear through,
Pint. 3. 240.
ov, ill to speak, ill-boding, dole-

ful, Agam. 1161.


202,
dious, Pint. 8. 367.
Polyb. 11. 16. 6, the untowardness
of the ditch—
or ill-disposed, 1. 61. 4.
^\,
adv. ill-furnished

I act ill or untowardly towards,

),
Dor. ill-boding- embarrass, Polyb. 27. 6. 10.—
inglorious, infamous. ill- I feel embarrassed, am in distress, 1. 28. 9.
named glory, infamy, Nem. 8. 62. see Lex. Polyb.
..,
,— ,,
evil,

,
a rumour too bad for utterance, an

^,,
impious report, Hecub. 195. —
f. rpu, address ominous words, Hec.
reproach, blaspheme ,
ov~ hardly fit for habitation, un-
pleasant, Iphig. T. 219.
inextricable, Polyb. 24. 1. 13.
,,the untowardness of a place

,
183.

, ,
, evil report, infamy, 2 Cor. 6. 8. ill-
boding cries or curses, Philoct. 10.
•/, ,
— —difficult to pass,
,
.
1. 4. 7.

yielding a bad smell, fetid.


.
, ,
,
, , ,
202, >j, a bad smell, stench,
unfriendlv, CEd. C. 1323.
ov, c. difficult to be ov, having a name expressive of
borne, unwieldy, grievous, unable to carry, evil, ill-boding; thus is said to be cV

weak, . as synonymous with xt, Ajax, 926;


1. 12.

, adv. grievous!}'.

-
, ,
f. I bear ill, am and are called from their
indignant, grieve, fret, Septem, 782. resemblance to —
evil spoken of, in-

,,
-, ,
xyav, to be too impatient under af-
fliction, S. Elect. 257.

,
famous, Androm. 1190.
I fill with shame, cause to regret,

,, .
difficult to be borne, Cycl. 343. Plut. 6. 262. I feel false shame,

,
oi
ill-sounding on the
harp, doleful, Iphig. T. 224.

, , y, evil-minded, malignant.
evil-disposed, enemies
to the mind, distressing, Androm. 1043.
adv. with an evil mind, fr.
— bitter
. -, ,
,
8.

feel
122.— am shy or coy,

r
h,
2. 1. 4.

that which causes shame, regret,


Plut. 6. 235.
,
-.
shyness, false shame.

alarm while watching,


I watch with
II.
difficulty,
183.
—— —— — — — —

,
357

,,
, , ,, , 358

, ,
, ,
,
,
6, a diver. urinator. 7. 6. 14. the receiving of
7, of two.
for 7), two

,, for bribes, bribery an act

,
twelve, the of bribing, bribery, corruption, Dem. 236.

-,
, ,
twelve,

,, . , .
twelve oxen,
sc. apostles
II.

or
'.

twelve times around the goal,' Olym. 2. 92.


.
703.
ov, worth

running

.
3. few*.

a play on
adv. by

f.

,
way of bribes,

ma, pay tribute, Dem. 1072. 26.


Equit. 996.

,, 6, , one who brings a reward,


ov, twelve months old.
twenty-two cubits long. Pyth. 5. 115.

,,
,
^,
ov, having twelve angles,

turning round the goal


twelve times, scil. a chariot, Olym. 3. 59.
ov, a commander of twelve.
ov, for twelve drachms.
,
6, , twelve years old.
lah>coi>c!c, adv. twelve times ,,
,
, ,
, ,,
, bring gifts, Polyb. 4. 4. 3.
I

a gift, donation, dos.


3j,

a present, Herod. 1. 61.


I collect presents, Herod. 2. 180.
— tjgog, and , a
giver, dispenser of good things, 11. /. 155.
,,
ov, consisting of twelve threads or meshes,

.,,
K. 2. 6.

, ,, .
,
,,
, , ,
twelfth day. 7/
ov, furnished with twelve
arts or tricks, Ranae, 1362.
of twelve cubits.

twelve days ago,


ov,

also written
twelfth.
or on the
« |7*
JCi 9 E«,
Od.
ace. of ov, himself, 436.
a particle expressing grief, sur-
prise, from the Hek HH ; or it may be the
imperative of saa — ex, suffer, leave,
.

away,

,
is

,
,,
and rendered twelve years old in Hes. . 751. let alone, Mark 1. 24.— ah, alas.
, or thug, q, a town of contr. ijv, and by excluding , , a

,
{],

Chaonia in Epirus, renowned

,
for its temple conjunction, expressing condition or hypo-
and oracle of Jupiter a, ov, though — whether, or — may,
thesis, if, since,
of Do don a. — when — except,
, , , shall unless,
.
,) ^,
la,
la, indecl. for

,
2, ,,
f.

,,
Lye. 719.
I

a house, building, II. . 316.


a house, II. a. 426.
a chamber, Ranee, 100.
build, fr. hfita,
ifwe die,
we die.
you see, i.
i.

e.
e.
Rom.
whether we
^^, John
when you
. see.
live
8, if

6. 62, if
we
or whether
live,

then

,
domestic, Agam. 970. 4. 4. 12, consider

,)
Doris, a country of Greece.
the Doric dialect.
&>,
an inhabitant of
.
if this
num.
be more agreeable,

,
whatever he may say.
:, Mark 9.
i. whether this,
e.

23, which if he

,
so;, 6, Att. say,
Doris, a Dorian— Aagiog, . ov, of which if we ask, whatever we may ask.
^,, —
Doris, a Dorian, Doric
I imitate the Dorians) use the Do-

ric dialect,

0,—
Pint. 7.
the Doric dialect, Dorice, Theo. 18. 47.
658.— , adv. in
Mark 4. 22, there is no-
thing hid which if it be so, shall not be re-

,
vealed, there is nothing hid but which
however shall be revealed, $
,,,
dowry
ov, a gift— offering, Mat. 5. 23.—
bribe, Dem. 343. 9.
, John 3. 22, if God be not with
him, unless, except God be with him.
254.~,

,,,
, a gift, favour, for "Exvoc, n, ov, splendid, II. >.
,
,^ ,- ,',, , ,,,as a gift, freely,
out acause,in vain, to no purpose, Gal. 2.21.
f.
Mat.

aor.
10.

1.
8.— with-

m.
a finely wrought robe, a costly garment,
II. y. 419.
, contr. %, the

,, , I

honour, Olym. 6. 121.

,,
give, bestow— present

givesgiftsto.g^j^, wasgiven,Herod.8.85.

.
he
with gifts, spring,

I
,
ver, II. . 148.-
ov, of the spring, vernal, II. . 89.
spend the spring, A. 3. 5. 9.

,,
a gift, Jam. 1.17.
ov, to be given as a gift, voluntarily dant, Mosch.
ov, niirsed by the spring, ver-
2. 66.

,
gifts,

,,
a gift,,, , .
given, (Ed. T. 392.
II.

Plut.

bribes, a traitor,
. 522.

and


,
to be conciliated by

,
1. 112.

Dem.
,
,
245. 15.
6,
meat sent

, receiver of
— a corrupt
as

,, or
abandon,
,, of
,,, ,
and
f.

for
plur.
himself, herself,
themselves, this by contr. becomes

they
do not permit, ), . 132. . 549. imperat.
I
fr. ov
allow— sutler— leave,
,
itself,

and
phir.

magistrate accept mo-


ney as a bribe, sell myself or country for
money, betray, Equit. 66.
am corrupted by presents, am bribed, A.
I
f.

), I
, for

mits, 6.
, , ,
do thou suffer, allow, forbear,
a. 276. ., or
,for
414. imp.
he suffers, per-

-
2 A 2
contr. , . 44>.
— —— — — — —
359
they suffered, Ion.
e.517. also Ion. or
permitted, g. 802. aor.
suffer, left,
,, ,
I did
for ,,,
.,
he suffered, ,
pleased, Herod.
it is

an equality, to be equal,
in
7. 15. , ,'
pleasure to thee, thou art
360

to be in

, ,,
,
he permitted, ». 299. also II. 596, . to make it

,
in likeness, to deem it alike,

,
imperat. leave, allow, cr. 451. optat. Herod. 8. 109. xvxirxvhxt
pres.
ir. 58.
fer, v. 12.
17 £&;,

,,
for
for soi,
I would suffer, Od.

whether he would suf-


, ov, must be forsaken, trees, is shady,
Plato Leg. 1. p. 5, re-
pose in lofty trees, amidst or under lofty
xhov, scil. in the ,
, ,
Helen. 911.

septimus. to
, ov,

,,
the seventh,
the seventh time.
,
-,
house of Pluto, in the grave.

,
ov, within the country, and not

beyond its boundaries, 2. 4. 31. in the earth —


.
,,
seventh day.

-,
soil.
Od. ,. 81.

,
born on the seventh day,
Apollo. This led iftschylus to call him
ov, on the or under the earth, Leo. Tar. 68.

--,

ov, on land, land plant, Plut. 1 0. 6 10.
landed possessions, Polyb. 38. 8. 4.
ov, one who had a demon

, ,,
ov, leader of the seventh gate, speaking in his belly, ventriloquist, Plut.
Septem, 806.
',, ^, — -',
7. 632.

,,
,
q, the seventh day
of seven days, week, Exod. 34. 22.
indecl. seventy
the space

,- ,, --, laugh at, deride, S. Elect. 279.


ov, a derider, Hipp. 1000.
I gene-

,
w •, seventy times. £Qo «i7%o5-o5-,oy,seventieth.
ebony, Theo. 15. 123. pn.

the Hebrews
,
ov, of the Hebrews.

,,
n, ov,
(

ov, , a tree hard and black within,

, Hebraic,
, -],
up

,
rate, produce, II. . 26.— rise among, spring

it is
—intervene,
,
Herod. 1. 190.
allowed, or lawful, Ranae, 702.

indigenous, Herod. 2. 47.
ov, innate native,
adv.

Hebrew letters, Luke 23. 38.
Hebrew dialect, Acts 21.
V),

adv. in Hebrew, John 19. 13.


EN, ,, becomes

40.
E^otiV, <<W,
E£qx'i*i,

-, ,
-,
with genuine feeling, feelingly, QEd.T. 1256.

-, produce, engender, Plut. 6. 502.


ov, born in or among,
— posterity.
, off-

--,
composition
(in spring, (Ed. C. 1485.
, ; , or , .,
,
before
£
», before ,
, I engrave upon, Herod.
one who
2.4.
before ,) a preposition governing

-,
also filled his
the ablative only, and as it is connected belly by his tongue,an informer, Equit.779.

in,
,
with different words, it may be rendered
on, at, into, among, before, with, to-

,, , -,
. II. 731.
I bend in, fix the knee between,

,,,,,
wards,

in,
Mat. 2.
days, during the days of Herod,
at that time,

, .
Mat.
.
1, in

12.
the

- -,,
1.
3.
I write upon, Prom. 788. 2 Cor.
3.— record, command, 8. 2. 10.
register, record, Dem. 969.
written upon,
.

,, -),
on the sabbath, 14. ov,

Mark 5. 2, in an evil spi- recorded, registered,


rit, in the power of an evil spirit, with an a written lie, a forgery, Luc. 3. 30. ,-
evil spirit, in water, by means of records, deeds, treaties, Pol. 3. 27.
water, Mat. 3. 11. in sins, in f. ,
I put in one's hand, give
^^,
a state of sin, John 9. 34.
-, , in to, Isthm. 8. 92.

-
prison, into prison, Mat. 10. 16.
in Sicily, into Sicily, K. 5. 8.
among us, Luke 1. 1. ,,, , in us,
in himself,
f. I give a pledge or promise

to another, promise, Plutus, 1203.—


I pledge myself, engage, A. 7. 4. 9.

to himself, Acts 12. 11.

3. 53,
in the
people, in the midst of the people, before
them, Mat. 9. 35. Time.
in the judges, in the presence of
them, before them,

with ten thousand,


Luke
14. 31, in ten thousand, in the midst of,
-,
,,
-
John 3. 21, they are done in God, in the lame security.
,, ,
answer for, Polyb. 6. 17. 4. engage by a
promise, obtain in marriage, Plut. 6. 46.
ensure a delay, hazard, 6. 554.

/ ,, -fi, a promise, pledge,

the securities of the worthless are them-


,
hi-
Od. . 350,

selves worthless to be received, lame suitor,


,
name or power of God, with the finger of ov, )-/;,
ov, 6, a bail, sponsor.
,
God. as you hear in me, in
my person, Philip. 1. 30.
,
12, in him, in his person, on him.
Mat. 17. , -
f.

mune with, Heb. 7. 19.


Eyyyc, , ,
I draw nigh, approach, com-

,
, ,
,
adv. nigh, near, at
-
among
,
,
in one another, towards one another,
yourselves, John 13. 35.
to be in fear, to be fearful,
to be in anger,
hand like, comp.

to be angry,
, --
qoovfi
,
,
^, very

- nearer, sup.
very nigh, nearest,
near, very like madness,
-
an
— — —

-, .,
, ^)
361

,
362

, , -, .
6-~
, , , 7. 5. 26, to pass life, live in, Long. 44.

-,
them who are nearest, most devoted to arms.
m. Att. Plat. Dial. p. 225.
f. 1 bind down in, entangle,

,,
f. (p.
by epenthesis of

,
new verb
2. 20. raise
—awake
from
,
I

sleep, -,
awake
hence the
raise up, build,

,, -, — stir
John
up,
harness to the yoke, receive
as a yoke, adopt, Ajax, 747.
I lay myself

-,
quicken thelyre, attune anew, Nem. downinff p/ac<?,liedown,Aves,122.PJut.621.
j

10. 39. by sync, I am number with, aor. 2. pass.


awakened —rouse

,is

,risen into being,


,— born, Mat. 11. 11.
, the raising up, building
myself, perf.
is

-,
with an oath, bind, Thuc. 4.
were piled up, Thuc.
seize, E. 6. 4.
1 9.
32.
1.

— hold
93.

,
,
stirring up
ruption for
§ 48.

,
resurrection,

and 20.
,, a cor-
in Herod. 7. 5. see

to awake, gentle, refresh-


y, ov, fit
hind in running— leave
to perish, Acts
distress,
2. 27. leave a friend in
abandon, forsake, Mat. 27. 26.

leave be-
in the grave, suffer

, —
ing deep, Theo. 24. 7.

, ^,
leave unconsumed, reserve, spare leave a

,
mulate, Plut.
Rhes. 686.
r\, ov,

6.
quickening, calculated to
884.— must raise,
sti-

-,
name, Thuc. 2. 102. impart leave in the

-,
memory, cause to remain, Long. 7.

-,
adv. vigilantly, Rhes. 524. I blend, join with, Luc. 1. 35.
purify with. pu- f. fa, fix, thrust in, Od. . 97.
rified in mind, upright, 2. 1.4. entwine with, fix in, K. 9. 12.
.-,,
-,,,
-,
sleep in, Anacr. 8.

the young, Hipp. 1096.


flourish in

,
manhood, delight

,,
hurl, Trach. 1089.
I stitch, K. 6.
prevail in, Thuc.
1.

, 2. 47.

-, ,,, ,
f. cause to sit down, fix, put in, II. f. 223.
— set in the mind,
-,, ,
,
erect a statue, Jph. T. 979. fix inthy mind, ah. 574.
f. I station an army, Polyb. conceive, Theo. 17. 15. — lay down, com-

16. 37. 4. place an ambuscade. prehend, Od. . 613.

,
--,,
I sit
wait
sit

-, ,
-,,
down, rest upon,
Herod. 5. 26. f.
for,
down, Rana?, 1571.

,
settle, Thuc. 1. 8.

,
Ion.

place in, appoint,



ordain, Androm. 269.
put on, suborned, Luke 20. 20.
I look upon, favour, Anacr. 59.
1. 1. 11. — lie in
shall
y-xoi-ri»;^, spread carnage among, ah. 607.

Eum.

2. 254.
look upon, Plut. 5. 375.

113.

Plut. 9. 118.
,.
escape with scornful looks,

dwell with, 2 Pet. 2. 8. gy-


cause to dwell in, put in, Luc.
he who dwells with,

, ,


-(>,
-,
-, , -,
observe, Plut. 5. 70.
riot in, Troad. 997.
,
trails, intestines, II. . ]
plur.
76.
en-

,10. 20.
,,
,,
f. renew, consecrate, Heb.
hath been ratified, 9. 1 8.
,, , dedication.
-,, Long. 10. 7.
I lie
insert.
on or in press upon an
enemy, E. 3. 5. 15. Thuc. 4. 73. lean upon

-, ',
a friend, am devoted to, Theo. 3. 33.
— —

,
the festival of dedication
institutedby Judas Maccabaeus, when the
temple was repaired and purified after its -, shave, shear, Eur. Elect. 107.
exhort, command,

,
profanation byAntiochus Epiphanes,2Macc,
10. 6. John 10. 22.
--,.
.-,',
plain

-,,
in

-, .
.
-,),
of,

8. 7. 3.

inward, IV.
I call in, summon,
accuse, com-
1. 2. 7. E. 6. J. 4. S. Elect. 780.

I adorn myself with, glory

tinsel, Thuc. 2. 62.

),
I conceal in, cover over, bury,

Plutus, 713. veil.


or
1. 8.

, pour
I bend the neck

opp. to
,
-,
-,
,

,
Prom.

-, , ,
73. summon,

blend with, II. 6. 189. Plut. 9. 122. Nem.

-,
9. 119.

-,

confound, Herod. 5. 124.
ov, blended with, Plut. 8. 621.
reproach, Iphig. A. 1006.
,
Plut. 3. 849.
order, instigation, K. 6. 24.
ordered, incited, A. 1. 3. 13.
iloc, q, a sting, prick, Vesp. 425.
ingraft by making a puncture.
I mix,

,-,,
noise, Equit. 105.

-^,
a

-^,
shell, Theo.
ov,
f.

rustle
9. 27. .
in with a gurgling

among, sound with

fruit-bearing, (Ed. . 25.


,,
-•,

511.

365.— crime,
-',—,
, the brain, II. 0. 85.
shut in, inclose, stop up, Antig.
confine, restrict, Long. 43.
accusation, complaint, Trach.
II. 1. 2. 7.

,
-, endure with, Androm. 261.
refrain from, curb, Att. 2. 6. 22. sustain.
descend in, Nem. 1. 57.
one who has a share
taker of hereditary, Lye. 1060.
equal honours, Antig. 813.
in, a par-
— —— — —— ;

-,—
363
, , ,
X 364

,
, ,, ,
, , ha, aor. 1.
£.

assailant, give way, avoid,


I turn
aside bend down, incline— bend before an
3. 3. 28.
bend myself, bow, 2. 3. 1 3. in-
.-, —
-
the right of possession in a fo-
reign country, Polyb. 28. 17. 8. 2. 4. 31.
I found, build, Herod. 5. 23.
roll round, Tphig. T. 7(

, ,
,
inclination

, ->
flect the voice.
,— bending inward,
declivity, Polyb. 9. 21. 8. con-

surround encompass, Vespee, 395.
, circular, periodical,
the works of Aristotle in circulation,

-, ,
vexity. his popular works, called also

,
-,
.
,
.-7,
. ,
Ey-/co/Ao£,oi/,hollow

,,
Nubes, 48.
I

become

gulp, Equit. 263.


£y%o/Ai#,oc.c,intestines.
like Coesura,
reduced, proud, luxurious and extravagant,

,, carve, inscribe, Herod.


sculpture, Exod.
1.

39. 5.
i.

,-,
93.

-),
e.
vulgar arts, Plut. 4. 16.
,
round a gown
linedroundwithapurpleborder,Eccles.532.

wallowing, Plut. 5. 652.

,,

roll in, entangle.

bearing in th(
womb, pregnant inspired, Long. 13.
,
,

, I embosom, embrace.

(, -, ,
bend down, Ranae, 816.

,
adorn myself with hair, Ey-;ey£<y,aor. 1 .encounter, II. y. 1 4i

,
or a knot of hair) adorn with hu- ou, written in praise, and re-

,,
-, /, , ,
mility, 1 Pet. 5. 5. cited at a festival, Olym. 2. 82.
hasten, Od. t\. 340.

— <, ,
I raise dust, praise, panegyric, enc<

,, adv. after a struggle, Nem. 3. 63. mium, Ay. 10. 3. I praise,

-,
,

I sprinkle with dust, Luc. 2. 448.
exercise myself, 2. 3. 8.
I cut in, indent, render a road
rough so as to impede, delay, Acts 24. 4,
intercept, Gal. 5. 7.— hindrance,,
,,,
,) ,
,
5. 3. 2.

, — encomiastic
for praise, Polyb. 10. 24. 8.

,
Ey£-/jyo££uJ, (see
epenthesis
^/,
p.
p. pass,
eulogist.
supplying topics

m. by

1 Cor. 9. 12.
,— mortise, Long. 41. 3.

, watch,
for inf. I

-,
c, a graving tool, chisel.

gyjiparogj ov, indented, harassed.

,
Ey-x.o^yA£(y,wrapup,Nub.lO.%o^yA)7,ahood.

-,
,
I strike with the herns, butt.
set in order, prepare,

Od. 218.
o.
am

^, ,
, ,-
.
vigilant, perf. imperat.

,,
yourselves watchful,

182. Plut. 6. 114.


vigilant,
.. 299.
Eum. 709.
adv. watchfully,
keep

II.

, ,, .

, ,,,
ov, angry, inveterate a grudge, I watch, Od. 33.
Herod. 110. am enraged, imp. for

,,
9.

-,. , &,
-, , .
Choeph. 39. raise myself, rise, II. . 41.
aor. 2. I shout a stirrer of battle, brave in
Thuc. bawl out, Plut.
6. 628. battle, (Ed. C. 1054.

,
to, 8. 84.
, ,
having poiver in him- I gape at, mock, Vesp.
self, robust, strong having power over him-
,,
720.
, —am eager to swallow, Luc. 3. 338.

—,
self temperate having power over others,
being master of, A. l. 7. 6. Polyb. 1. 6. 3.
,-, ,,
,
-,
f. relax, Pint. 8. 752.
I curb, Plut. 9. 302.

,
f.

,
adv. forcibly, with strength, containing brass or money.
,
firmly,

^, ,
they held by force,
retained the power of, Polyb. 1. 79. 5.
power over one's desires, con-
tinence, temperance, Gal. 5. 3. 1. 5. . ,,
-,
f.

p. m.
,
,,,
write upon, Plut. 9. 116.
v„ impression, Plut. 6. 208.
bestow upon, Parmen. 8.
daub with filth,

,
exercise control over my pas- Vespae, 624. caco.
02, , ,
-,
sions, am continent, 1 Cor. 7. 9.
I class with, place in the same ,
its handle
to, also
its point
a spear

&,
II. y. 338.

,
,
rank with, 2 Cor. 10. 12. E. 4. 1. 19. se-
lect, Plut. 6. 39. Polyb. 9. 2. 4.

-,, admission into, Luc. 2. 490.

,
— —
345. a sword, GEd. T. 1286.
, spear-raging, Olym. 78.
, thunder-brandishing,
7.
scil.

, -,
applaud, Theo. 18. 7. rattle, rap at.
I knock at, drive in, Jud. 4. 21.
trip along, Range, 377.
-, . Jupiter, Olym.

Sanscrit, to strike dead)


13. 113.
smiting with the spear, (fr.
II. .
,692.— de-

,
Ey hide in, Mat. 13. 33. voted to the spear, warlike,

,
fr. Od.

^, ,
,rxi, is concealed, eclipsed, Long. 15.

,-,,
, a cake baked under ashes.
pilfer cakes, Equit. 819.

a foreign country,
hidden^?/•.?, Philoct. 15.
I have a house or property
. 2. 6.
in
y. 188.

brave,

take, .
II. n.

6.
,
1 34.
spear-bearing,
(,
1.
spear-brandishing, robust,


) Nem.
take in hand, under-
attempt, A. 5. 1. 6. at-
3. 107.


— — — —
3G5
tack, . 4. 5. 16. /, it is neces- 1 , she caused to be seated, placed,
3tf6

/, ,
.

sary to attempt, must try, I erg. 5. 11. Od. . 233. aor. 2. m. £,


he placed him-
— lay
an attempt, enterprise. self, took
/, his station,
,, a. 48. in

,
II.

an undertaker, Aves, 258. ambush — Dor. I seat my-

,
gy^B/gnjTjjf,
?7>;/£7£, down — rest— stoop down, .
r„ ov, apt to attempt, enter-
',
self, sit
,
275.

-,,
prising, prompt, adventurous, E. 4. 8. 22. seat, statue, Call. 4. 228.
ey%sigthog, ov, held in the hand, iE. Supp. 22. — abode, 2. 72.— , a seat, place,

-, , manual — dagger, Ay.


take
abode.
my own hands, under- Thebes,
I in
— time of
the seat of Thebes,
. 406.— statue, Polyb.
2. 14.
II. 16. 1. 4.
i. e.

take, Thuc. 108. — put in the hands of


5. U. . 647.
, ^,, chair—persons seated, , sitting,

-,
another,
2. 4.

,
,, , , ,
,
, ,, ,
E.
,
surrender, A.
deliver, intrust,
4. 4. 12.
put in one's hands, surren-
',
dered, Herod. 5. 106.
or
§.
3,
3.

f.

,
seat,
assembly, (Ed. T. 13. rest, Herod. 1.17.
I seat, fix, settle,
I take a seat, sit, Theo. 17. 19.
,
seated, sedentary,
220.

1 . 3.~~
. .
\, , ,
,
,an

,-,
-,
eel, II.

,(,\&\.
^, ,
'?,,
,
f.

aor. 1. m.
myself, drink, 2. 2. 26.
.
ov,
203.—
having the eyes of an eel.
I pour on or into, Od. y. 40.
eels.

pour into
-.
firm, steadfast, 1 Cor. 15. 58.
f.

Theo. 24. 108.


I render firm, establish.
a pillar, 1 Tim. 3. 16.
abottom-twister, sea wrestler,

-, ,, , )
-,
Ey
wrap up in ilannel, put on.
hold an assembly, lead a dance.
I have in use.
hand, Herod. 7. 145.
in >, (,
a bench for rowers, Herod. 1. 24.
seat, chamber, Septem, 456.

,142. feast upon,


I eat, feed upon, II. .
.
319. inf. ,
, ,
-,,
Ey-^utyw, thrust into, Hercd. 6. 75.

, »,
to eat, . 203. imp. for v^ov,
.
make a noise as when clear-
ing the throat, spit upon, Luc. 2. 716.
-,,
-,,,am
or

m.
they did eat, devoured, Od.
for ?, he ate or fed upon, U.

, .. $,
9.
501.
,-,,
.

,
wanted, Luc. Att.

,
2. 30. p. vilx, part,

Ey -^^,
I draw near, 413.
f. r<7<y, anoint, tinge, Lye. 1455.
II. . having eaten,
inserting , ,
II. . 542. perf. act.
— f. , ,, p.
by

-
, ,
ov, fit for anointing, unctuous. Att. ^'/^,
plup. hence
,,
I delay, tarry—dwell upon —am ate down, devoured, Vesp. 834.

,
,
late, A. R. 3. 10. 7. cut off with the teeth, hath eaten
,-, —
I am eaten, feed

,
, .. .
I colour, stain with, to ?y-

,
away, Ran. 1015.

,
a passion 3. myself upon, II. . 237. consume, for
which gives a colour to the character.

^,
putinapot,dish a?nan,Yesp. 288.
I permit, concede, it is al- ,
,
2 pers. sing, thou wastest thy heart,
hast thy heart consumed,

, fr. the form ,,


, -
129. fut. m.
m. f.
.

,
lowable, practicable, or expedient, E. 2. 2. by sync, and contr.
13. O. 8. 16. ^/, if the
, Att. ^,, p. pass.
have been eaten, -
, ,,
water

, ,,
glass permit, Dem. 1094.

, ,, . 3, are eaten, Od. . 56. becomes

gen.

,
vx, or eyavyoi,
or
ov, native, indigenous.
Mo\.
Dor.
Att.
I. It im- , , -,
- -,
,
, ,
also and
, an eater, Herod. 3. 99.
ov, eaten, consumed, Trach. 678.

, . ,
plies an affirmation in answer to a ques-
tion, vyi hx yes by Jupiter,
,. ,
,
>>7,
a thing to eat, eatables.
, food, meat, II. 469.

\, food, provision fodder, II. . 504.
.

,
for for

,,
'^, \, ov, sweet, for

,,
II. . 172.

soil, foundation, bottom,


ground-work, Long. 8. Od. . 249.
$,
, ,, v\, ov, fit for eating, O. 7. 36.

for
food, Od.
twent}'
121. .

,
viginti.
lands, opp. to the inhabitants, Polyb. 9.
^,
, worth twenty oxen, Od. x. 431.
39. 3.

6.

^,,
II.
level

plut.

, ,
,,
with the ground, Polyb.
— dash against the ground, Luke
:. 178. marriage gifts, Pyth. 3. 176.
dowry — settlement,
6. 33.
9. 44.
,
,
,, ,
, II. r.
, ,,
I long for, covet, II. . 481.
desire, request,

382.— thread,
dew
a lock of
II.

fillet.
x. 41.
— a thing dropped, lamb.
hair— mane,
hair,

,
/* «/ — (

riage, I portion,
or

'/, ,
I settle in mar-
Helen. 939. Od.
one who portions a
. 53.

, ,
am
vj,

hairy,
ing fine curled hair, Theo.
bushy hair, Od.

1. 34.
v. 176.
hav-

,
',daughter, father-in-law,
f. —
cause to
, sit,
f.
II. u.

-, by
settle,
382.
sync,
Od. £.
, /,,
8.— aor.
m.
f.
make

I
imp.
wish
hairy, cultivate, U.

—am
v\k"hov, Ion.
willing, II. /.
.

347.

353. — pre-
— — —— — — — ——— — — —

,
367 I I 368
,
fer, II. a.
wont, Herod.
116.— am

ov,
1. 74.
able, Od. L 223.

inclined to hate, malicious.


,,
— am
,
Wia, imperat. of
fer,

, ,
used adverbially, suf-
adverbially well, see Theo. 5. 75.
,, a mead, II. . 483. a well wa-

,,
adverbially, to be spiteful tered or grassy spot, o. 631.

, , ,,,
,
or malignant, 1005. 15. Dem. for drop, shed, Od. . 1 54.
,
will-worship, i. e. worship .',
, ,
#— , ), ^,
imp. aor. 2. p. m. oi-

,
f.

proceeding not from reason, but from a


propensity to superstition, Coloss. 2. 23. part,
^,, by
, f.

by sync,
p. inf.
plup.

,
,
,,,
I do a thing ill from malice, act
basely or cowardly, Polyb. 4. 38. 6.
,—
a base desertion of duty.
, \, — mentally,
3. see
yunv,
hold, witness,
observe, A.
sync,

—know consequence of
Ion. yha,
4. 1. 15.
perceive, understand,
I see,
.
be-
1. 1.

,,
ov, 2. 2. 1 3. in observing,
a volunteer, Od. 292. . A. — know a person, am acquainted
6. 2. 3.
adv. of one's own accord. with, John —know how do a
1. 32. to thing,

,,,,,
ov, 6, , willing to labour, diligent, am accustomed to do, Mat. 7. 11.
. 2. 1. 9. willing labour. , ,, to know or acknowledge a favour,
cheerful in entertaining
ov, feel obliged, for I might
-
•,
3. 70.

, ,,
5. 1, 5.

am
p.
a, ou,
voluntary
tarily, Is£. 11. 12.
m.
,
strangers, hospitable, a cordial friend, Thuc.

accustomed, act as usual,,,


, ,,,
dependent on the will,
adv. volun-

is
IT.

I
used,
know
,,

}> and
or /,

,,
f.

myself to be seen, am seen— seem, appear.


cause
aor. 2.

But it is worthy of remark, that while «/-


have the passive sense
of to seem, see 11. a. 228. . 791.
&,, and have the active sense
aor. 1. m.
I

,
,, ,
0.

plur.

,,
408.
tom, part,

to custom, x. 60.
,
for
what

being accustomed, according


is

II. t. 536.
eating,
usual, cus-

,of to see or to know, see II. o. 724. . 532.


. 374. imperat.
-/\,
.,
,
,
,
behold, lo.
knowledge, Plut. 7. 388.
yi, ov, fair, specious, Od. . 278.

),
,
accustomed, inured, familiar odious to the sight, ugly.
,,
,
6,

with, Plut. 6. 27. Thuc. 2. 67. form — sort, species, kind, Po-
, ,, ,
, ,
self,

,
,
,
, ,
f.

train, II.
am
1. 2.

inured or trained,
p.
10.

brought up in such customs,


2. 1.6, thus habituated,
which is usually done, usage,
that
8. 7. 3.
I accustom, inure,
I accustom my-

.
.
lyb. 6. 10. 2.
fairest in form, II. 1. 2.
in sort,

E. a. 4.
(scil.

examples of this kind, Long. 13.


.

ov, forming the species, specific, A.

,
form the species, specify.
specification, Long. 1 8.
the
things

, ,,
^,
, train,
it is necessary to accustom, must

Ax.

yi, ov,
2. 1. 28.
ov, usage, institution.
customary, attained by habit or
, ,
21.
chapel,
ov, dim. of

^,
lyb. 13. 7. 2. idol, idol-worship,

1 Cor.
ov,
a little figure, Po-

8. 10.
a place for an idol, shrine,
1 John 5.

,,,
,
discipline, Arist. Ethic, a. 9. offered to idols, Acts 15. 29.
,
,
custom, institution, ov - ov, 6, a worshiper of idols, ido-
it isnot the custom, or lawful, Acts 25. 1 6. later, Cor. 10. 7. the ,
02, , ,
1

a race a race of birds, — worship of idols, idolatry, 1 Cor. 10. 14.


flock, brood, II. o. 691. race of bees, . 87. make an image, invest, Plut. 7.
,
§. 73.

,

swarm race of pigs, herd, multitude, Od.

race of men, nation, gentiles race
of women, the female sex, Pyth. 4. 449.

- ,, ,
367.

,

imagery. Long. 1 5.
via, , for
the causing an image,

perf. part, of
used adjectively, having known, well

, ,&.,
a crowd or throng of associ-
ates, II. y. 32.
-,,
yi,
ov, 6,
ov,
prefect of a nation.

,
national, gentile, heathenish,
,. ,,(,,), , —
,
informed of, II. «. 385. skilled in, /3. 7 18. e.g.

II.
adv.
473.
quickly, immediately,
I wish, utinam.
Mat.
tiles
18. 17. oi scil. the gen-
heathen-like, Gal. 2. 1 4. &,),
f.

, p. m.
I am like, seem,
or

EI, conj. if, si — although, etsi, etiamsi


since, quandoquidem, qucniam — that, quod to doubt. §
he seems like to one doubting, he seems
II. 158, , .
— that not, quod non, Heb. 3. 11.
ther, num, an. ,,,
whe-
since, ,, — she appears like goddesses to the face, quite
like them. To be like a person is to be se-
, ,,
,
utinam, I wish
not, except, unless
if
sive, whether, or
aga, un-
, ) ,
cond or inferior to him, hence
means to yield, give way, Gal. 2. 5.
.
less indeed, unless perhaps,
otherwise.
if not, (scil. ovosvi II.

to none, yielding to none in courage,


459, second
,
— —— — —— ——— — —— — —
3U9
, ., I 3y0
retire,

,
II. . 348.
. 138, giving way to his
courage, acting from their impulse,
for aor. 1. imperat.
way, Isthm. I. 6. ,,
^'
yield, give
inf. in the sense of
, ,
Od.
six.au,
impetuosity and
and

,
,,
,
drink,
thus differs from

butions,
. 57.
a sumptuous feast, and
a marriage feast,
an entertainment paid by contri-
11.^.201.— I feast, Od.

,
tiie imperat. give up, II. -. 337. gave way,
Od. s. 332.

compare,
f. ,,
I cause to resemble, liken
>. —
13.
,,
express by an image ,
siding over birth,
,,
, one who
, Diana
Heb.
feasts, a guest.
or Juno, Lucina as pre-

separated from
7».
mud or

,
al-
or painting, O. 10. 1. ol those loy, just, as sincerus means sine

., ,
who made themselves like, who imitated, cera, without wax or alloy) unmixed, pure,
. 3. 2. 8. —
compare the past with the fu- unstained, Philip. 10.
1. —
sincere, genuine.
ture, conjecture, .
1. 6. 19. a$, ,, freedom from all gross mix-
assimilation, 3. 10. 1. —
conjecture, ture, $,
a sincerity of God, a

,
Luc. 2. 404.

,,,
Plut. 2. 822.
Septem, 525. ,, ,, ,
conjecture,
an image,
a guesser, -
purity of heart such as God, who is free
from all earthly passions, approves and in-

-— , ,—
spires, 2 Cor. 1. 12.
comparable, Trach. 702.
ro, (part,
jectively) like, likely to be done or come to

,, , ,
pass, i. e. what is probable, usual, fit, just,
,
used ad-
,
. 294.
,,, ,,,,
f.

6. 214. roll round


I inclose as a wall, II.
aor. 1. by sync.
pen up, a. 409.— whirl about,
perf. or I
reasonable,
meet, to
scil.

or
it is likely, it is
according
,, , ,
am hemmed or cooped up, . 203.—-stand
round, encompass, o. 215.
Od. . 257.
bulwark,

,,
to fitness, as is fit.
two-fold more than what is fit. see (Ed. T. ,
>, a place where a serpent
or
73.
ingly, .
adv. probably, fitly, becom-
4. 2. 8. reasonably, justly, 8. 8. 10.
probable reason, Polyb. 12.10.2.
a, ou, cue who gives way to any im-
,,, -,
or
a den.
coils itself,
-, a troop, turma, Plut. 7. 57.
a wrapper, scroll
,
heat or warmth arising from the
,,
^,
—,,
revolution of the sun, Plut.7.743.Vesp.771.

,
pulse, rash, vain, superficial, Polyb. 7. 7. 5.

,— not regulated by just principles, Long. 2.



wallow, am giddy, Plut. 4. 502.

, adv. rashly, inconsiderately


effect, in vain, 1 Cor. 15. 2. Prom. 449.
without

), ,
giddiness, fear.
turning the feet, i. e. grazing,

,
,,
,
Mat. 22. 20.

,,
, , , ,,
,
like in voice,

,
, .
ou, like,

Dor.
vj,

,a
Od. v.
likeness,
—imagery, Long.
twenty, viginti.
,
the number twenty, Hes. s.
88.
^, (scil.

image, impression,
37.
portrait painter, A. P. 49.
, image-maker, painter.
,,
U.

coil,
. 424. so erro means to graze.
Att. f. >, I roll together, fold,

Theo. 22. 81. Rev.

eddy, curling as smoke, Apoll.


wrapped up, Ion. 38.

,
, curling,
I
6. 14.
, rolling as a whirlpool,
Theo. 13. 42.
blow about, II.
4. 142.

492. .

,
, ,
790.

,
the mysteries of Bacchus and

,
Ceres, celebrated every twentieth day of

, , ,
,^,, , ,. ,
August.
or of twenty years.
part,
wrapped up,
wrapper.
f. I wrap around,

II. o. 402.
about, perf.
roll
having his shoulders
a

,
,
twenty-nine
twenty cubits long.
twenty-two
indecl.
twenty-seven
indecl .twenty-eight
ou, ol, the inhabitants of Helos sub-
jugated by the Lacedaemonians hence the
Helots came to signify the most degraded

,
slaves of the Helots
:

,
indecl. twenty-five twenty- a female slave.
,
four.

,
, ,.
, of twenty measures,
. 264.
capaci-
garment, (from
covering, Bion.
to put on)
1, 79.

, . , ,, . ,
ous tripod, clothed in, (Ed. C. 1776.
II.

twenty months old. from , imp. , contr.


but in the dual, and plur. dropped.
ou, twenty times as much to be
,,
etv, is

. or -
,,poet,m.,,
, ^,.
contended for, II. 349. itou, imperat. Inf.

, twenty fathoms, or one hun- — pass,


dred and twenty
cr
long, K.
, twenty-oared
^.
feet
, optat.
, or $,,plup.
2. 6.
imp.
$—-, imp.
— , ,,
gal-
p.
, part,
at,

ley, Od. 322.


/.
motion,
I go, As this verb denotes
come.

~, -oc, twentieth, 11. a. 765. vicesimus.


-, a banquet in which a troop
the direction and nature of the motion de-
pend on the preposition or adverb joined
2B
—— — — —
371 I 372
, ,,
, ,—
to it.

against,
go through, ha, penetrate go
I
attack, oppose go back,
return go to, come, approach— go on,

march go to the grave, die go on board,




- ,, so.
subj.
,,
, ,
were, 25. 117. imperat.

,,,
let him
by
be, let
sync, for
lest
it

we
be.

be, 1
or

5. 9.
let
be thou.

them
inf.
be it

, be,

, , ,
embark— go into, enter go on the wing, to be, 25.


,,,
go in the tnidst, move go up, rise. for
fly — 116; 14. 25; 25. 39; 3. S. optat.

,, ,
The present of this verb, as is the case with
verbs of motion, means the future, I , that they might be, adverbially, thus
far, enough, be it so, well, fut. by
will go. The participle may be often taken
adverbially,
going sunk into the sea, he immediately
sunk into the sea.
together, agree, converse,
,
,.
5. 4. 10, he

to come
to

, , , sync,
,, -.
will be, part,

ordained, Trach. 172.

/, ,
destiny.
Dor.

, ov, perf.
shall or
being.
part. pass, of
,, fate,

come to us.

, , , ,—
senger, see Sturz. in

place,
6-oiov
fr.

spring
,.
he who goes, the mes-
Damm. 864.
contr.
up — live A. 2. 13.
3. 1. 10, of whatever sort
, ,
,, ,
of a I

avail,
am — am years old, Call.
times—
for nine years,
am

r„
in the ninth year,
5. 179.—
adv. for nine
ov, the ninth
11. . 400.—--
am nine
adv. nine
nights—
2,

it is,, whatever it may import
.
am to be,

,
., the number nine.
a sea ,
,
living in the sea.
,
turn out, happen, 2. 3. 2. exist.
laws are. are in existence, are laid
down, O. 14. 7.
.
, ,
for =~, it is lawful,
whatever are
. ,
gull or coot, Od. o. 47S.

,
timber, a ship

,

maritime.
logv, a sea

the wife of a hus-

,
1. 6. 19. p. 7 9.

,,
lawful, whatever may be done,

A. I. 5. 9.
or

3. 4.

Yt i>, it was lawful for any one, any one might,


am in reality or truth, opp. to
II. 8. 1. 14. 12. 2. .
, ,.
bands brother, a sister-in-law.

260. ,
account
yi,
of, II. a.
ov, by the way
175.
side, II. .

, ?
., ,
The nominative is often implied, and shaking with leaves,
. ,
is ov, lofty.
sometimes for motion, II. . 632.
-
,, . for
some men
since, if so be that, Rom.
— £/7r-/!,ifby any means,
8. 9. 1

quo modo,
Cor.

, ,,.—,
1. 4. 2, are there 15. 15. si

whom thou admirest. ?


there are those things which, some things
x, scil.

~
. 5.2. 2. IIo.
, ,1. if any where,

, -~,,
if ever adv. if at any^
or some, time, if in any place, if ever— if
^,,
, , , ,
for there ever, siquando. if byanymeans,si forte.
are those decrees which I passed by, I imp. aor. 1 say, speak
.

passed by some decrees, there speak in return, answer speak for another, —
are which places, some places, Thuc. 1. 12. —
defend speak to an assembly, address
—, with a noun in the dative, may be speak on a subject, discourse, teach speak —
rendered in English by have, habeo ; with —
speak with au-

,,
in evidence, declare, assert
that same noun in the nominative, xv- thority, command, order— speak of parti-
w/qox, there is to them a forum, they culars, enumerate, describe, so to

, . ,,, ,
have a forum, . 1. 2. S. The inf. is speak, nearly, almost,
often apparently redundant, but not really scil. so to speak in compressed lan-
so. xv 5. 2. guage, to speak briefly, in short.
they would not falsify being willing to ,
I drive away, keep

, - ,
5, f.

,
be, i. e. willing to be really false, they would
not willingly falsify*, wv here
. — off, II.

imp.
72. include, contain, II. v. 706.
drove off, averted, . 130.

.
, ,,
or some equivalent participle is un-

,
yov, shut up, closed, Od. y. 88. separated
',
:,
derstood, the time now beginning to be, at
-
or withdrew from, ,. 219. aor. 1.
the present time. .
5. 3. 1G. p. 300.
scil.

which appears to belong to them, see Ay.


10. 2. that which pertains to them.
,,
oozovv that
for

, , they shut up, Od. |. 411.


perf. pass, for have been shut
\m, are confined, Od. *# 283. plup.
for they had been shut up, . 241.
,,

are,
poet,

5.

wast, 10. 23.


,,
thou art, 11. x. 176. ssv, Dor.
Theo. 14. 24.
109;
are, 15. 73. imp.
25.

,,
for
,
I am, Theo. 20. 19.

,, ,
> ,
14.
r,v,
he is,
they

I was.
he was, were, 2.
for %v,
for
9 w6x, thou
we ,
drawing themselves,

were cooped up were protected, or pro-

,
tected themselves, II. . 354. part. pass,
pres. ^yo.tiii'o/jseparated, withheld or with-

, —, shut up, fortified


by sync, for

I separate, force away, II. «. 147.


or

90. ;nriv, Att. they two were, 3. plur.


jjctj*,

naxv, by contr. r^av, by sync, they , .


^,,
437.
r,:. ';, ov, inclosure, prison.
,
,
3/3
.

,—

.

, ,,,
,
— — —— — ——— ——— —

<?.,
3/1

^
a gaoler, for Ion. J ask,

, ,,
5. 4. 8.
, rowing the alternate action ol part. gen. for ask-
wings or oars, Troad. ,, ing, Herod. 5. 13. for uga-
569, said of a babe sucking one breast then
another. The term was suggested by asso- , them asking, 3. 62.

&, —a

,,
poet, ', one, alone cer-

,ciation from the preceding


— bank of oars, Polyb. 1. 21. 2.
connect, bind, for
tied,entwined,Od. . 295. connect words, —
,
tain one, Mat. 8. 16.

one
1

,
, one, and then one, one by one, or
after another,
Thess. 5. 1 1, edify one the other,
for

,
t$rj

—,,
.
say, relate : but in this sense is used or there is not as far as one, not even

,,,
I ask, interrogate, Herod. 1. one, Rom. 5. 12.

,,
,
,27. for

bound with wool,


sj,

, bondage,
,
an assembly, Hes.
529.
0. 802.

Ocl.
^, an olive or laurel branch
()
and crowned with
6.
EI2, or

1. 9.
in, 2. 1.
in
i.
,
prep, governing the accusative
only, into, unto, for, until, towards, against

e.
Ajax, 80.
into the Jordan, Mark
within the house,
unto peace,
. -
, ,,
all sort of first fruits, to signify that scarcity
had ceased, and used in the festival called
for peace, in peace, Mark
,
8.

unto the remission, for the remission

, ,, ,
nrvavstyia, Plutus, 1054. Pint. 1. 45. of sins unto them, to them,
-, , q, the principle of union between Mat. 12. 41, unto the preach-
families or communities, peace, opp. to unto the shore,

harmony, opp. to
order, opp. to
discord , ing, at
on the shore, John 21. 4.
Acts 22. 30, he set him unto them,
-
- -,
or

, ,
confusion reconciliation, opp. to before, in their presence

}
enmity, Horn. 5. 1.— the fruits of peace, unto Christ, before, Heb. 7. 14.

,
prosperity, felicity, abundance.
et, , /:, disposed to
peaceful, peaceable, Equit. 802. O. I. 17.
— growing in peace, i. e. tranquil, happy,

,
abundant, Heb. 12. ll.-T u£nvtx.a>g, adv. in
peace,


1 Pet. 4. 9.—
,
Mat. 18. 15, if he should sin
unto thee, against thee
Mat. 1 3. 22, unto the thorns, among thorns
unto one another, towards,
unto all ",

,
,
a peaceful manner, not like an enemy, E.

^,
3. 1. 19.
live in peace,
am
enjoy peace, Polyb. 5. 8. 7.
,
in,
Mark

,,
9. 50.

,
•/
3.

, ,
,
Syria, through all Syria, Mat. 4. 24.
unto the morrow, until, Acts 4.
unto ten thousand, about,
near ten thousand, .2. ] 5. Polyb. I. 63. 6. .

,
a peace-maker, Mat. 5. 9. I bring in a message, announce,

a pacificator, E. 6. 3. 4.— f. ,, Ifl-£. 4. 8. 2. 1. 11. —


inform, denounce, be-
,

,
I make peace, reconcile by repentance and tray, E. 3. 3. 5. , informa-
reformation those who before were at en- tion, news, Polyb. 9. 9. 7. —
an action at law,

,
mity with God by their evil works,Col. 1 20.
, ,
, an informer, Plut. 4. 105.

,
.

;-/>?*., a law respecting the

, 6, a keeper of the peace, sc.


Ylo. 5. action called Den). 720. 28.

,
1

,
, ,—
, context,

,
structure, arrange- introduce, institute, Polyb. 4. 20.
I
.-
ment, Long. 22.

,,
connexion, series.

, 6.— fetch,

A^r. 2. 3. 3.— import, 2. 3.

,
or and a thing twisted, bring into court, Polyb. 2. 1. 8.

,
wool, 1\.. 434. Od. o. 134.
also
or .-
,
made of wool, woollen.
,\\.\% necessary to bringin, mustsummon.
sc. oixn, introduced fat court

,,
e. 137.
,
ov,
6, y,

,
a wool-dresser, II. y. 387.
bearing thick wool, fleecy, II.

a great talker, one


more than he means, a dissembler one
who affectedly extenuates his own merits,
, ,
who

says ,

,
,
to be brought in, A. R. 1. 4. 1 1.
,
, the person who introduced
or moved this action, Dein. 976. 14.
vie, introduction, institution.

I gather in —
he collected, aor. 1.
m. recovered himself, II. o. 240.

,
and thus stands opposed to

J.

I
who
claims more than his deserts, Theophr.

,,
Char.
dissemble, Aves, 121 ,
, J. sneer
I throw my eyes upon, aor. 1. opt.

Mo\. he might discover, II. y. 450.


for ever, CEd. T. 283.
. ,
aor. 1. /,
I rush in,

-,
at, am ironical or jesting, Plat. Dial. 111. burst into, Nub. 542.
,%
,
dissimulation —irony, Plut. 5. I carry, bring in, Ranae, 521.


:,
30. mockery, 2

, ny
adv. ironically.
Mace. 13. 3.
, dissembling, ironical—
with what ),
my own
I listen to, Theo. 7. 88.

cars, Call.
I
hear with
1. 54.
shoot, throw darts into, A.
dissimulation, Vespae, 174. 7. . II /Helen. 1603.
2B2
,
375
, , , —
I 2

I 2

376
— .

,
,
, , .
listen to.

of,
being heard,
" having the object of his prayer answered
by means in
caution to bear under his trials," Heb.

,, ,ivall, .
,
aor. 2.
7. 4. s.
consequence

^ I
of,

spring
his pre-
5. 7.
upon
into temptation, fall into, Mat. 26.41.—
enter the heart, suggest, John 13. 27.
-), drag into, Acharn. 379.
adv. after that,

hereafter, Ajax, 35.


sc.

as to things after that, afterwards,

, ,
, ',
pass in, enter, Septern, 557. I enter in a torrent, rush in.
f„ 1

,
, having erected, Herod. 1.66.
go on shore. land— go on the
haul in, Od. 317.
adv. still, until now.
.
.
,
,
,
same bed, share, II. 201. go on an expe-
dition, march, sail with, Od, /3. 172.
t?.

force unto, compel, Prom. 289.


I look up to, !, a. 307.
Jutaxi/sipi, go up into, mount, II. ,. 421.

,,
, ,
I hold into, reach, extend into.
I introduce, Aves, 648.
in hand— advise, E. 1, 6. 8. propose, Po-
take

lyb. 11. 25. 8. stanysrsav, it is necessary to


take in hand, must act, Time. 6. 90.— u-

), ,
,
up to the shy, Apoil.
rise
adv. i'or once, at once,
gether, Polyb. 3. 115. 3.

, , ,
1.

rash into, enter


1360.
to-

,
introducer.

,
, , .
vh introduction

run, burst into, Aves, 1169.


I sit upon, lay, II. v. 285.
stanyn?nu ov >

.
,
for f. I

, ,
impetuously, Nub. 992. entrance, Od. .
-: ,
264.

, , .,
y,
hereafter, again. aor. 2. m.

, ,,
E/o-a<p<?c«j/<y,
adv.

— enter into, reach, .


f. i /,
on the day
let in,
after,
admit,
to-morrow.
.
arrive at,U.|.230.
1 7.

,
4. 5. 7.
,
I fly,

I send,
. 1.
escape into,

3. 12, for ,
II. (p.

aor. 2.
put into, admit, introduce,
they pour into,
^,
494.

£e>7ffs
go into, enter,
I for e/<7-
h, he caused to embark, put on board, ,, ,
empty themselves, Herod. 7. 109. &a.
,
sacrifices by the senate
.
^?, ^«/,
x. 309.
,, ),
when first assembled, Den). 400. 24.

,
11.

,
,
into,

21.

,,

invade— flow
,
I drive,
into,
introduction, entrance, A. 1. 2.
incursion, invasion.
I force myself in, thrust into.
I place on board, E. 1. 6. 17.
.
make an inroad
. 7. 12.

- ,',
,—invite, Theo.
7»«,
2.
drive into,
carry in,
I call into court,
132.
sail for,
import, Plut. 4. 401.
I introduce by a proclamation,

proclaim, $. Elect. 692.


summon

arrive at.

,,
,/,
, , - ,.,
^,
I throw my eyes upon, imp.

looked into, Theo. 6. 35,


I
E/o-yga<p<y,I write upon, record, Trach. 1183.
aor. 2. sias^xxqy, I look upon, see
2. 25.
roll in, Yesp. 1474,
to be involved or comprehended, 2 Mace.

EtaAuhTa, tumble into, Call. 4. 33.

,
before vie,

,
II,

I
«. 223.
receive into, admit, accept,
,
I think like, conjecture,Od.^.31.
shed light upon, illumine.
my mind on, observe, 1\..

,
2 Cor. 6. 1 7. s?, reception, en- put 335.

,
),
,
,
tertainment.

,,, ,
),
,
I steal into, Dem.
sink into, penetrate, A. 4. 5. 11.
,incursion, Rhes. 603. ^qsf&a,
look upon, view, Od. a. 101. behold.
15. 3. 14. staolix,

dent, E.
cv,
,,
5j,

5. 2.
a way in, entrance, 1 Thess. 2, 1
revenues, income.
receive into intimate friendship.
was made a friend and confi-
17.

,
/>
, , ,,
',),
I roil in, wrap up, said of the hare
when it enters its haunt, K. 5. 16.

-, ,
f. drive
harbour, Od. /. IIS. enter a city, A.
j},
sail into
2„ 26.
triumphal entrance.


1 .
,, until,
I

,,
f. was, go into, enter,
donee, II. y. 409. ors.
dwell among, Call. Ep. 3.
indwelling,
houseless, dreary abode, Phiioct. 541.
',,
,-
Od, /. 1 20.

,
imp. or I introduce strangers to live in a

,
inf. st-

asia, p. m. siay a, plup. 3. plur. «<rs£ —


c ity send a colony, Polyb. 5. 108.
go into, invade — enter

,
, introduce myself as an inhabitant
for

,
fffas/, si'jystactv, I

,
the mind, occur, A. 6.
sight,
463.
encounter or sustain the looks, II. .
the things which enter
the body, meat and drink enter on an
office, Piut. 9. 241. siaixaiv, they enter,

aor. 2.

Heb. 9. 6. come, appear before.
saqhuou, Dor.,
1. 11. — come within
— ,
,
am introduced, receiveanhabitation,Ilo. 3. 5.

II.

, ,
600. see,

into, Trach. 930.

n, ov,
212.
I
visit, II.
look upon,
behold,

I hasten to, rush


restore, Dioscor. 29.
bring into harbour, Tlo. 3. 1.
equal— equal feast, ade-
e.

/iuuou, 1 go into, enter embark go into — — quate—equal shield, round— equal ships,
a battle, engage im join, II. . 798.— enter evenly or well made— equal mind, i. c.
—— — — — —— — — — — —
377 A 378

, , ,
equal to the qualities of his person, Od.
. 336.
of— by, by means of, in consequence of
after, in, beyond, above.

,
/,
,, ,
burst into, (Ed. T. 1275.
I send into, put in the mouth, send

-
for, suborn, (Ed. T. 704.

,,. , I spring, jump among, Acts 14. 14.

, 2. fall upon, Ajax, 55.


s| from sleep. g| ov^avov, from heaven.

originate with him—


among you, who of you
all tilings are from him,
who from

Mat. 27. 29, a crown from thorns, a


. , /,
'

, ,
f. I sail into, CEd. T. 431.
ov, 6, sailing into harbour, admis-
sion into port, E. 2. 2. 5.
crown of thorns,
bread, John 6. 26. of the bread
from the

from its fruit, by its fruit, Mat. 12.


— -,
, , -, , ,
/•/£>, I breathe into ov, o, one 33. from faith, from having
who is to inhale my last breath, a bosom faith, by means of faith, Rom. 3. 22.
friend, Theo. 12. 12. from measure, with measure, John 3.
-

,
1 make way in, introduce, 34. from sufficient inter-
Pint. 10. 312, it makes vals of time, after a long time, Luke 8. 27.
even for them to say, they find it expedi- — . 1. 26,

,
ent to say bring a child into a family to to smile from her former tears, i. e. in the

, , , ,,
be adopted, cause to adopt I
receive in adoption, adopt for myself, see

',
note on Luc. 1. 349.
midst of her tears, or immediately after

affliction, in
3-, 2 Cor. 2. 4, from much
the midst of, in much afflic-

, , ,,
adopted , adoption. tion from the right, at or on the
I go into, arrive at — visit, right, Mat. 20. 21. from the
Acts 28. 30. darts, at a distance from, beyond the reach
to go in and out, tarry, see Acts 1.21. of the darts, from an accusa-

- $,
I

^, ,
»
I exact money, collect, charge
with, Pint. 6. 670; 9. 332.
exact or raise money for myself, claim,
tion, on account cf it, A. 2. 5. 2.
for §,
from
from a God, ), -. 347.
above
all, . 96. all,

7\, from these, by means of these,


,Long. § 32.

\, ,
,
it governs two accusatives.

,
,
jj, exaction, imposition.

I flow into inf.,,,


he kept away hunger. s|
whence, for which reason, .
from which,
2. 4. 6.

, ,
/,
to descend in showers, Luc. 1. 129.

&,
, )
in.

into,
,7\ ,
I put on board, 11. a. 143. aor. 2.
stow within, E. 1. 6. 14.

,
Theo.
.^,
aor. 2.
13. 23.
I run into, sail 3. 3. 10.
sc. <?-/],
at the side, from
the reach, beyond the reach of a bow, A.
at a distance,

the time past, in the time past, Dena. 40. 14.


from

. , -, , ,
(see I bring, carry into — bring ',, adv. far, at a distance— adv.
in a law, enact —bring money, collect
in —
from afar comp. further, Herod.
present, offer, Long. § 16. bring an action, 8. 60. and this again compared,

,II.

,
institute— introduce,
a torrent brings within

,,. . 495.
f.

,
introduce, admit, Vesp. 887.
\, the bringing in or gathering of
,,
1.

itself,
1.1.
sweeps away,
further, more distant, Herod. 3. 89. sup.

distant, 1. 134.
, 6,
furthest, most

he who drives
the sun or Apollo, fr.
his rays
11. a. 479.
from

,
afar,

,3. 9.

, ,
harvest, O. 7. 40.
—income,
, $

contribution, tax, Ho.
4. 49.
bring into, A. 4. 6. 1.
I
they brought, Od. . 91.— pay tribute.
-, ov, eacn, every one,
meaning a whole number taken separately,
each one, Mat. 26. 22.
i%54foc,each individually, unusquisque.
mliii

,,), -, ,, . come often to, visit, Andr. 944.


I deliver into the hands of a per-
-yv
or
every day, daily, Heb. 3. 13.
adv. in each place,

, &,
son, intrust, CEd. T. 392.

,, , ), —
every where, ever, .
6. 2. 3. 7. 14.

,
adv. within, Od. . 775. in-

,
or from each place, E. 3. 4. 3.
ward, .
,
1 2. 2.

,
tive, A. 1. 2. 21.

on this side, ivith a geni-

ov, o, ij, having the face towards, in


adv. each place, every country,
A. 3. 5. 1 1.—
place, Od. y. 8.
adv. for each, in every
adv. every where

,
,that
. &',
front of, II. o. 653.
adv. secondly, next,

2. 2. 1 4.
whether,

EK, and

, -.
and thus, and in consequence,
1. 2. 1.— so

then, therefore, hence ita


or, sive.
adv. likely, usually, S. Elect. 1456.
before a vowel, (a preposition
.
—, ,

',
and
ever, 2 Pet. 1. 15.

4. 6. 2. ,
far-darting, Apollo,


II.
ov,
a. 75. 370.
a, ov, each of two, uterque— one
the other both armies, E. 4. 2. 9.
adv. each time, both times,
adv. by sync,
6,

.
^-
^.

governing the genitive only,) from, of, out fcv, on either side, on both sides on every —
— — — —— —
379
,, 38U
-
"
,,
side, !, . 15:5.adv. in either
place, in both places, utrobique.

from
r„ ou, the most distant, by sync,

Apollo the sun, and hence


Diana the moon is called the far-*—
.
)?,
2.

27. 19.
1. 5.— bring
ou,

jected, nauseous, Plutus, 865.


~, , a throwing over board,
,,

Mat. 12. 35.—
forth,
cast out, Hec. 697.

things thrown on shore,


to be re-

loss, Acts

,, , ,
Iphig. T. 1424. shooting of the corn— ex-

,
darting, 11. y,. 83.

,
adv. voluntarily, for the sake, pulsion, Plut. 2. 58.— mouth of a river.

,,, . ,&,
', on account of. Lye. 60. Ssau

-
favour of the gods, isfhm. 4. 1.

,,
by the

indecl. a hundred,

hundred-handed, 11. a. 402.
,
hundred-headed.
having a hundred heads, Prom.
353. eenticeps, kkqvjuo».
,&, ,
centum.

hence </=^>«, a narrow
.,
.%,
6. 4. —
ou, outcast, Phcen. 817.
— repulse, Polyb. 18.
force out
.
force, cause to give away,
.%$, forced, urged, Plut. 122. ,-
Ztuvpiuog, wrested from me, Philoct. 1157.
bring out, cause to disembark,
I

E. 1. 6. 14. turn aside, — 1. 18. force


pass.

.
8.


15. 2.

,
a sacrifice of a hundred out of one's right, deprive, Thuc. 5. 98.

,
fy,

,
oxen, i. e. a costly sacrifice, hecatomb, 11.
a. 309.
dred oxen, II. 449.
— ou, worth a hun-

.
ou, a hundred feet square, spa-
f.
I gush out, flow out, Apoll. 4. 1 41 4.

,
et&hvasv, flowed out, Plut. 4. 633.
cry out, shout, K. 6. 10.
I march out with speed against an
18.— march out

, ,
cious, II. -. 164. or -Treoou. enemy, sally forth, II. 1. 4.
•7?,{,
.,
,, ., fern. adj. having a hun-
dred cities, scil. Crete, II. 649.

.
having a
hi behalf offriends, succour,
-,, ,
3. 18.
Herod. 9. 26.
succour, reinforcement, Thuc.

,
.?&), ,
hundred gates, scil. Thebes in Egypt.
, I dig out onions, Pax, 1 123.

.
f.

,
oars,
having a hundred banks of
a very large ship, 11. v. 247.
i. e.
E*<o Pi or fa, I throw out water,
squirt, Lye. 1009.
f.

expel— — I ^,,
^,,
ouog, a hundredfold, hun-
dred times as much, O. 2. 3.
sKXTovTochuvrog, of a hundred talents.
,
am thrown out by the waves, cast ashore,
Herod. 6. 188.
thunder out, aor. 1. -
was called
, the command of a body
consisting of 1 28 soldiers. The commander

a centurion, Acts 10. 1.


or hiaTouTa^og,

IxxTourag, alog, %, the number one hundred,

'^,
Theo. 17. 82. a company of one hundred.
^.. ,,
,,
,
TYiU-zi, is

S62.
shattered by a thunderbolt, Prom.

roar out, Iphig. T. 1390.


I

gnawed out, saw-dust, Trach. 700.

,, .*/,
I give in marriage
,
that which is eaten or
.
,-
,, ,
ou, a hundred fathom long. I give myself in mar-
,-, -
=, ,
ou, a hundredth part. s*,a-o<rYi,
-/?,

the hundredth drachm, Vesp. 658.


, a squadron of a hundred cha-
riots, II. 6. 3. 11.
riage, marry, nubo, said of the woman, Luke
20. 34. —
am given in marriage,
ExytivofAXt, aor. 2. p.
m. sxysyuai, inf. sxyeyasucu, Ion. sKysyu-
—,
&,
or
years old, Luc. 3. 218. Pyth.
, announce, Agam.
4.
a hundred
501. . fisu, I am born of, spring from, szyeusaucu

,to be out of life, depart from life,

,, —
f.

(see fiaiua) aor. 2. ?f &7}u,


of go out of a ship, disembark
507.


I go out
go out of
E.


6. 4. 24.

-youa, ,,

turn out, happen, succeed
it proves lawful, Herod. !. 78. Plut. 6. 559.
offspring 6, , ,
-


danger, escape go out of a subject, digress
go out so as to move on, proceed, ad-
j

/,
a son, child,
ysusTr^, ,
^ -youoi,
offspring,
ou,descendants—
Androm. 128.
vance, A. 3. 2. 1.

,
,
happen, Long. 44. Herod. 7. 209. come
out of a rock, descend, II. . 107.

go out as an effect from
its cause, turn out, come to pass, become,


, extol, Iphig. A. 101.

35. opp. to puuaoi, to smile.


aor. 1. m. »,
ExyiXao), laugh out, laugh heartily, Od. .

write out,

,,
, ,
,,,
sag, q, pass, exit —
escape, deliver-
ance, 1 Cor. 10. 13.— issue, event.
render frantic, Troad. 408. ,-
,
,copy, transcribe, Ran. 158.
Ezy^riyoost), p.
spring up, Aves, 1413.
m.
Dem. 1180.22.
I keep awake,

with fury.

cast,
pel,
act a Bacchanal, am seized

aor. 2.

throw out throw away, reject— ex-
Mat. 9. 25.— send out, Luke 10. 2.—
lead out with haste, John 10. 4. cast out
of power, dislodge— draw out of the ground,
(see


^) I 4. —
f. ), weep
will offer myself, 2

,
Exui,Igive out money on interest, lend,
:,
Deut. 22. 25.—

.,,,' take
look out,
over, Philoct. 281.
consume, expend, Polyb. 25.
Cor. 12. 15.

see, II.
I borrow.

-. 477.
off the skin, flay, E, Elect. 824.
3.
— — — ———— — — ——— —

,
,

,,
381
Ion.

receive of an-
I

, ,
pointed,
E
horsemen who sallying
382

,,
other, II. v. 710. look out for, expect, forth pursued the enemy, E. 4. 5. 16.
— — — — — .1,
,, ,
John
rod. 4.

fasten to,
5. 3.
1.

imp.
entertain

.
await, befall, He-

tie so as to
121. untie, disengage from.
II.
hang from,
aor. 2.
3. 14.
1.


m.
f.

— escape,
I take
II. .
am stripped
I strip
99—, .
off, strip, divest,

myself,
aor.
1

sKoeicc,

, ,
disengagement, remainder of a
debt, Dem. 890. 14. ai
Thuc. 1. 99, deficiencies of
,
Cor. 5. 3.— lay
strip off the body, die, 2
aside, Piut. 6. 526. shake off a fierce tem-
,.
,
per, it governs hvo accusatives, see

,
tribute and ships, i. e. a neglect to pay tri-
.),, escape, egress, Herod.
, 3. 109.

,
bute and ships as engaged to do. erf. pass, they

&, , n, ov, manifest, Polyb. 3. 12. 4.

,
conspicuous, II. .2.
became Dorians, from Herod.
— thither, jllue
8. 73.

,
v. manifestly. adv. there, in that place
— —

, ,
ov, o, sj, from home, abroad

, ,
reign wars, Piut. 3. 86.

,
loving an absent love, i. e. cherishing the
love of a person absent, Hipp. 32.
fo- then, turn.

hades, Anacr. 4.
that place, thence
there, i.

or
or
e. under the
ground, an euphemism for the grave, or
from
there,

, ,,, ,
, ,, , ,, , , 7
-,
I go from my own people, in that place —
thither, to that place, Ajax,

,
f.

am from home, am absent, 2 Cor. 5. 6. 700. or there, in that place.

,
depart from the body, i. e. die, 5. 8. or Dor. he, she, it,
, going abroad— travelling. when opp. to it means that, ille.

,,,
I cross, II. . 198. that there, or this here. 9

%^,

, ,,
f. fa f. I teach, for and he. sc. in
cause to learn by heart, teach fully, Bion. that country, there. s| from that
3. 9. O. 12. 16. I instruct time, these are the very
myself, i.

,
e. learn. things, Nubes, 981. adv. in that

,,, Ion.
rudiments, Ion. 1419.

from, escape, Vesp. 126.


I flee
aor. 2. ,,(, ,
,
manner, thus, Dem. 1105. 19.

war,
, a holding of the
#«/£,) a truce, cessation,
hand
Pax, 908.
in

, I give but— give out fruit, pro-

-, boil out, overflow , Septem, 715.


7


duce, yield give out a farm, let, Mat. 21. I seek out — seek out punishment,
— seek cut God, im-
——
33. give out a daughter, settle in marriage demand, Luke II. 15.

^,
give out to punishment, surrender, de-
liver up, A. 6. 6. 10.— give out ivatcrs,
plore, Acts 15. 7.
kindle, blow up into

, . —
empty itself into give out a thing to he
done for money, hire, appoint, Luc. 3. 50S.

,
'
a flame, "Pax, 309. renew, Pint. 1. 145.
)?<., ,
a far-shooter, a powerful

,
6,

see

, , /, ,archer, II. a. 96.— far shot, Polyb. 13. 3.4.

, ,
4.— exposing
giving cut, hiring, Polyb. 6. 17.
to wild beasts, Herod. 1. 116.
jj, far shooting, 1. . 54.

ov, Dor. quiet, at ease,

,
y\,

given up, betrayed, Acts 2. 23.


ov, undisturbed, tranquil, pacific, II. . 759.

, I give a full account oij relate a prep, governing the gen. with the

,
fully, Acts 13. 41.

,,,,permission, for the sake of, Hes. . 4.

,
2., ,
,, , ,
, ,
ov, o, »j, one who goes beyond the

.
bounds of justice, violent, unjust— avenger,
Rom. 13.4. i^foaijadv.unjustly, Prom. 975.
I decide, determine causes, K6. 3.

,
decide for myself, avenge,
Lev. 19. 18. pay the penalty exacted of me.
avenge, punish, Luke 18. 7. -
alarmed,

I
aor.
am amazed, Mark
Septem, 72.
extirpate,
embolden, Theo. 22. 92.
am over confident or intrepid.
1.

admire, unduly extol, Long. 44.


£},
»j,astounded,terrific,Dan.7.7.

9. 15.
I feel

, , ,,
I avenge myself
am punished,

pay the penalty, I deify, Long. 44. I wor-
what is ex- ship as a god. to have been
acted as a penalty, Dem. 801. 24.
), deified.
,,',

vengeance,
I chase away, agitate, Piut. 6. 632.
persecute, 1 Thess. 2. 15.
a, ov, to be driven away

/, ,
necessary to, must, expel.
, ,,,
avenger.

it is

,
,
,, I cut off with a sickle, Piut. 6. 395.
cut off the to?igue, Anacr. 12. 7.

,
ov,
,
, an edict.
the exposing of a child to perish.
put out, exposed, Acts 7. 9. 1

, ,,
,
.
jj. the looking out for, expecta- 6, beyond law, nefarious.
tion, Heb. 10. 27. acceptation, Polyb. 3. ov, a decree of the gods, an
29. 4. oracle, U. . 64.
,
a sally, E. 3. 2. 3. run out — sally forth — rush upon the
, 6, one who runs beyond the place ap- ene7)ii/'-i\yout asbeesfrom thehkc, E. 4. 2.6.
/,
383

,,
,
become
— —— —

hunt out, . 5. 25. ,


, ,
,,
I put on the form of a monster,
a beast in nature, Bacch. 1329.

',
——

jumped or sprang down


aor. 2. ,
from, 351.
II. r.

pluck up the stalk, Equit. 824.



384
he

, ..,
I squeeze, force out by pressure, glory, vaunt, Bacch. 31.

'
,
oppress, A. 3. 4. 11. zxfai-d/ig, affliction. I lie out, stand forth to view, Plut.
,),
,, — —

,,
I die outright. for 6. 16. am exposed, Herod. 1. 122. am,

,
,)—,
they died with laughter.
vxo,uxt, I feast upon, Prom. 1024.

exist, whose object
I empty out, aor. 1.
it is.
they

,
,
aor. 2. discharged into, Theo. 16. 40. 57.

,
,
f. jump from,
I . 427. —jump out
11.

— shake with violent palpitation,


-,
^ ,
il. x.

speak out, announce, (Ed. G. 1490.


, from the heart, prompt, ardent,
95.
I pierce deeply, Rev. 1. 7.

kill, Polyb. 5. 56. 12.

banish by proclamation, Herod.


8. 148. Polyb. 4. 21. 8. —

,
ov,

,
,
Persae, 372. Pint. 2. 264.
with a willing mind, ardently.
,
, ,
ardour, Polyb. 3. 115. 6.
burn incense, Ion. 1174.
offer,
adv. banished.

,
I plunder, ravage, Call. 6. 50.
Exxn^xivu, I corrupt, break, Eum. 124.
I move out, aor. 1. thou

— atone
,,
,
I

crifice in
make an offering of, S. Elect. 574.
for,Herod. 6. 91.
behalf of, Pint. 4. 114.
I sa-

, ,?\,
,hast started, (Ed. T. 362.
a track.

',
go out, imp. , Od.
— deviate
491. .
from

,
ov, necessary to be atoned for. f. break, cut off, Rom. 11. 17.

,,,
,
expiation, Plut. 2. 463. Ezzteicj, Ion. I shut-out, exclude.

,, ,,
flatter a man out of a thing, ob-
tain by flattery, cajole, Plut. 8. 100.
laugh out orheartily,
clear out, II. . 153.
..

.7.
I make
330. /!,
Plut. 9. 318.
we are excluded, Her. F.


am prevented, Herod. 1.31.
steal, convey away clandestinely,
rescue, II. . 390. .
23.

.,

,
clean, A. 1. 2. 16*. — exclude or pick out , a meeting or assembly of
^, »
,, ^, - ,
the base, Long. 10. 7. citizens, 3. 7. 6. a church, Acts 19. 39.

•, having the soul purified, upright, summon, hold an assembly, Po-

),
noble in mind, 2. 1.4.
,-, ,—
lyb. 1. 67. 8. harangue, Luc. 2. 647.

,
I sleep out, E. 2. 4. 15. 6, a senator —
one who be-
sixteen sixteenth.
ov, sixteen palms in length, ,-',
longs to the church, an ecclesiastic.
yi, ov, of an assembly. ~-

,
from

\,
. 109.

,,
the breadth of four fingers, II.

,
ov,
sixteen years old. .
consisting of sixteen ,
,,
a register of those citizens
who had a right to assemble, Dem. 1091.
6. ecclesiastical, senatorial.
,
called out, summoned, xxo -
-
,
threads or meshes, K. 2. 6. from the assembly, Orest. 947.

, »,
so,-, sixteen cubits long.

having sixteen banks of oars. Plut. 7. 9. 1 8.


trials before foreign judges,
were civil officers

,,— ,
I burn,

kindled, broke out.

,, ^,,
, ,,
,
came inflamed with lust, Rom. 1. 27.
a war was

a brand, inflammation.
I fail through fear, Pallad. 1 1 grow
weary faint, Ephes. 3. 13. 2 Cor. 4. 16.
Exxxhxy.xoy.xi, draw up with a reed, ex-
.
at Sparta appointed to hold an assembly.
they be- Ezx~h ,turn from— avoid, shun go astray,
Rom. 3. 12. retreat,
bend down, K. 6. 10.
Plut. 8. 310.

I wash out.
^, ,
.

1. 4. 23.— incline,

I hear from, II. tt. 13.


must avoid,
avoiding.
ablution.

\,
, ,
tract, Vespas, 380. seeSchol. on the place.
I call out

,
— call out prisoners, re-
lease, E. 7. 4. 27.— call up in the mind, re-
call, Luc. 2. 455. Od. . 1, he
f. tiaa,

Criuag. 5.—
scrape off, Herod. 7. 239.
I make a noise like
a scraper, pronounce with a broad harsh
voice, Theo. 15. 88.
',),

^,
,
called forth the souls of the dead, evoked

^&,
encourage, elicit, provoke, Polyb. 1. 40. 3. Exxo^x*

,, ^, ,,,
vering, unveil, reveal, Od. x. 179.
grow weary, become languid.
I gather fruit,
yields death for its fruit, Septem, 607.
out, Pax, 62.
Exxo~h
f. ,,
I swim out, Acts 27. 42.
cheat out of, Equit. 270.
I take oif a co- Exxoihxiva, I scoop out, excavate.
I shake or pick out grains, root

dislocate, Acharn. 1178.
engrave, write out.
I carry out convey —
Exxx<vxooy,xi, I reap the fruit, derive reve- away, conduct, II. . 359. draw out, ex-—
nues or profit from, enjoy, Dem. 700. 17.
— exhaust the ground.
ExxxtsiL•, I look down from, II. . 508. .
haust, Isr. 4. 2.
3. 43. —

extricate, rescue, Herod.
carry out to bury, Luke 7. 12.
\, they had removed.
— —— —— ——L — — — —
38."» A 38G

-,
,
,
Time. 2. 78. ?..7, ij, conveying away,

removing, Herod. 8. 44. exportation.


make a show
thou hast a specious tongue, Iph. A.333.
,
of. *.=.-
,—
ceive, undertake, encounter,
select,
Plut. 9.
Poiyb. 3. 42. 3.— take up, absorb,
761.
propriate, 6. 174.

take up for my own use, ap-
Herod. 9. 95.

,,,
I cut, knock oiF— fell trees cut — shine out as the sun. Mat. 13.
I
— —

,
off an enemy > demolish, E. 7.4. 32.— cut 43. out as lightning reflect a daz-
flash
offfrom society —prevent, 2 Cor. 11. 12. zling lustre, 7. 1. 1. .
burst forth as a —
SKK07TY1, yg, ij, cutting oflj felling trees — ex- loud sound.
tracting, PI Ut. 4. 141.

,, —
buoy up extol, Plut. 9. 129.
I EzhoivOdua,
,,
effulgent, c. ozs^og, brighter.
Icause to forget, aor. 2. -
,, ,,, I sweep away, Pax, 59.— deflower. for they caused him to

,, , .
cry out, vociferate. forget, deprived him of his art, II.
— £»/,
i. e.
I hang upon, 594. forget my strength,
Plut. 8. 72. sxz^s^ccofceci — I remit, r. 602.
hang myself upon, Plut. 7. 851. — hang upon etfkwis, tog, oblivion, Od. a. 484.
a friend, earnestly implore, Thuc. 7. 75. I lick up— devour.
In Septem,

,
,, ,
depend upon hang upon a speaker, fond-
ly listen to,
eg, sog,

I
Luke 19. 48.
hanging upon, catching
separate from, sever, Plut. 8.
at.
797.
458, the allusion is to a lion bursting into a
fold and devouring the lambs consume,
Theo. 2. 85.
lick, swallow up, Acharn. 1229.

,
— select — levy —reprove, reject— degrade,
. 1.2. — separate from the body,
14.
disembodied,
pick out, A.
,
dig out herbs, Apoll.
sz-
E>tku%cttt>a, I
Ez'Aeyo), I 3. 3. 12.
I. 374.
exheyo/xett,

,
is select for myself, choose, love,
II. 8. 7. 3. I 2. 4. 17.
sag, separation — secretion— bursting of a — am selected.

,
vein, Plut. 10. 791. Ezkzx-og, ov, o, ij, chosen, selected choice
separated from others, distin-
ov, — pure, dear, Luke 23. 35.
guished, Theo. 16. 39. choice, Ajax, 1320. izKzy/i, rig, election, choice, selection— be-
I knock out, wrench from— beat nignity or favour in choosing, xocr szKo-

,
away, expel, Meleager, 6. K. 10. 12. de- yyu vrgoOiaig, his purpose according to be-
ter, Plut. 6. 273. —
scare away, 6. 227. nignity, his benign purpose, Rom. 9. 11.

— —
deprive, Plut. 2. 857.

&, Thess. 1. 4. collection, exaction of


protract. 1

sag, the striking from the hand, taxes, Plut. 10.410.achosenfew,Rcm. 11.7.

,
K. 10. 12. beating off ezK^ovrog, q-j, to I gather in my mind, reason
be scared away, abominable, Septem, 535. upon, weigh well, Herod. 2. 89. Thuc. 4.
,%,, — calculate upon, infer, Hec. 744.
I plunge into a net so as to get

,,,
9.

,out on the other side, Plut. 9. 637.


tumble on the head so as to stand on my
feet after one complete revolution, 2. 2. 11.

, ,,
I roll out, unfold

display, Plut. 6. 297.


ostentatiously

show, exhibit myself, Acharn. 40.



will

,-,,

ExJKurKGi,
ov, 6, computation, estimate.

Theogn. 986. leave life, Plut. 6. 409. I


grow faint, die away, Luke 22. 32. fade
as the moon in an eclipse melt as snow
leave a subject, digress, Herod. 7. 239.
I leave


off, forsake,


,
out, disengage exhenpig, sag t q 3 falling away, fainting, death,
— I plunge into, .
1. 2. 22. iZKvhivbst-
I roll
Polyb. 29. 6. 8. eclipse £»/55-?»?, ov,

,
,
reci, he tumbles out, (Ed. T. 831.— dash
out, Agath. 59.

,
enemy
I foam out, rush, dash upon
wave, A. 1.8. 12. exxvpiott-
like a
the
',
attended with an eclipse, Plut.
fog,
6. 549.
ebbing, deficient, Thuc. 1. 97.
exhiveg, an eclipse of the sun.

-,
takeout theshell. hatch, Aves,l 108.

,
,,
/, &
vw&oct, to be thrown out by the waves,
Plut.

.
,
,,
7.

to the game, K.

have
407.
,
I
6,

my
q, dreading a dog
7.
render deaf,
1 0. fr.

ears deafened, Luc.


I lead out the dogs

chase away, persecute, Ion. 1 422.


go revelling with wantonly
sx,,
— unfaithful



1. 104.
rot

hunt,
/,
ExKsvzog,ov, very white
spend out the time
enrich the growid, Plut. 2. 842.
E*X/9TflS|»f<M,
I ask earnestly. s^rrrotQviustg,
prevailed upon by entreaties, Plut. 6. 750.
put forth, Even. 12. r^oyjvotAut,
bring forth, Helen. 265.
I loosen from, release,
whiten.
in trifling.

run away with, Androm. 603.


rescue, E. 7. 1. IS. mitigate, alleviate, sr.

,
2. 5. render weak, enervate, szhv- ,^
, ,
),
E:cXctyx»ucu, aor. 2. s'^ihAyjiv,
lot, obtain, Soph. Elect. 762.
throw up my heels, Vesp. 1483.
speak out, declare, Acts 23. 22.
,«?»>/, aor. 2. I take out, re-
I receive by

(&
Mat. 15. 32, lest they should be loos-
ened in body, i. e. lest they grow faint, ro
ret, aafcecrec, the having their
bodies relaxed or enfeebled, K. 5. 5. to
melt away, dissolve into, Lornr. 9. 15.—
2 C
—— — — —

%,
387

,
,, - {,
,
, , loose, dispersed—
adv. feebly, Plat.
r„
204. 1.
'

I grow
I scoff at,
afresh, am renovated.
Luke 16. 14.
388

,,
, Plut.
laxity,748. — release, 7. move myself away, Ajax, 369.

,Theo. 24. 33.— debility — consternation, a

,, ,, ,,
dissolute
ov,
state.
relaxed— enervated,
solute, Plut. 6.25.—
feeble, dis-
adv. languidly.
hibit
head,
I
by a nod
1.
unstring, enervate, Dem. 37.
decline, avoid,

5. 4.
— throw
-
John 5.
off by shaking the
retreat from, Thuc. 2. 90.
13.— pro-

/, ,
,,
aor. 1. pass. I was 1 swim out of vessel, swim ashore.

,
ignominiously treated, Philoct. 833.
E^AaTr/^takeoffa robe, expose, Trach. 942.

,, ,
I make furious or mad, Theo. 5. in
I become sober after intoxication.

Cor. 15. 34. Be sober


an adequate degree,
1

i. e. " Be no longer

,
90. I am mad, be- intoxicated with the lofty pretensions, the

,
come furious, Anacr. 13. evil example of your false teachers, but re-

/, ,
aor. 2. I learn tho- turn to sobriety of mind, and that in a de-
— find out, Isthm.
, ,
roughly 5. 72. Dem. 418. gree equal to your profession as christians."
wither away. Theo.
,,,
,
return to sobriety, wakefulness.

^,
3. 30, was blunted, yielded a dull sound. f. |<y, I swim out, swim over.

,
am enfuriated, Troad. 991. I come off conqueror, Polyb. 15.

, —
I send a written testimony as 3. 6. prevail,
unable to attend personally, Dem. 929. 24. Thuc. 1. 3, having prevailed into and settled

,
pen. bear testimony, Agam. 1207. in the fabulous.
,
a written testimony sent by f. , wash out, purify, xl. 239.

,, ,'
one who was unable to attend in person,

, -, ,
Dem. 1130. pen.— the testimony of one
who was nut an eye-witness, but had his
1. 86.
ov, extraordinary, eccentric, Nem.
adv. exorbitantly. s*j/o-
extravagantly ,1-993.,?.

,
clean,

,,
481.

express.
,
,, ,
Luke

,
),— ,
evidence from a person that was.

7. 38.
f.

I efface,
— I take off an impression, copy a likeness,

, to have been fully


I wipe
efface, infect, Plut. 5.
Theo.
off,

17. 122.
wipe '
,, , . return from, II. . 157.

compulsion,
voluntary, and not the effect of
2.1.1 8.—
adv. willingly, spontaneously.
1 act or offer voluntarily.

for , astounding, ter-

,
Od. . 522.

,
expressed, Luc. 116. Leon. Tar. 41.
3. rific, awful st(

,
, ov, to, a cloth for wiping, towel, and adverbially, in a manner that
image, Plut. 7. 325. Flaccus 4. astounds, terribly adv. in a

-, ,
ix^c£«r^oy,animpression,vestige,E.Elect.535.
an express image, a print.
terrible manner, greatly, awfullv, II. x. 268.

, ,,
CEd. C. 749.
seek the breast, trace, Eum. 247. lam amazed or
appease, mitigate, soothe. astounded, Herod. 7. 181. feel astonish- —
,, ,,,
, ,
,
p.m. by transp. ment at, admire exceedingly, Orest. 888.
,

,
receive my share, enjoy, Od. . 335. , unhurt — greatly affected,
,,, ,

,of,
,
.
, ,
out of tune, discordant ex-

,,
orbitant, Plut. 3. 50. from
dislocated, feeble,

,,
6.
ov,

I
I
a limb,
a tune-
2. 4.
practise, repeat, precompose.
immoderate, exorbitant.
measure out, take the measure
4. 1. —
give out by measure-
.
— Polyb. 16. 23. 5.— eager, incensed, 1. 7. 8.

,
,,,
, .
,
'^excessive emotion, Long. 38.
I educate, Plat. Dial. 129.

gushed out, II. v. 483.


,
a pupil or nursling.
brag, bluster, U. g. 803.
imp. for
,,
.
-
,
^,
,,
measure a road, traverse, CEd. T. 814.

A.

,, ,
,
,
6. 5. 1
dimension, Polyb.

3.
I spin out, draw out
5. 98. 10.

-,
in a line,
,,, f. ,
I cause to tremble,
Od. . 326, having his
mind astounded, stupified in mind.
,
strayed from, an

,
Agam. 49.

,
imitate, At. 3. 10. 1. hypallage for

,
f. I give out for hire,
hire myself, prostitute, 3. 14.
, , . cause to cease, stop, Ion. 144.
I prevail upon, induce, aor. l. -

, ,,
march out, aor. 2. for if ?- prompt, Plut. 2. 683. CEd. T. 1043.

,., he went forth, 11. . 603. I make a trial of, tempt.


-
,,
, ,,
^,
I
rows, Iphig. T. 1455.—
dictate, inspire,

/,,
endure throughout heavy sor-
bear
hardships, are sorely afflicted, Plut. 6. 402.
I suck out
f.

clear out, II. I. 218.
declare, Theo. 25. 3.
Bacch. 823.

,
proof, Herod.

sion, E.
598. — expel,
1.
I
I
optat.
make

1. 28.
3. 135.
a trial

send away, dispatch, commis-

E,

convey, conduct, II.
4. s. 6.
of,
contr.
put to the

.
,
,
389

^
,

sending away, dispatching.


— —

,
,,
—— — —— — — ———
390
.

,
sag, they themselves,

,,
filled for
to be sent away, banished.
I bake, season completely.
() - ,, ,
Phoen. 1479,
ou, Att. .,
.
, brim

,
be astonished.

,,
',,,
astonished.

adv. diffusively, scil.


to rejoice with a mind too widely
Dem. 1447. 17, to

,- ,
full,

fulfill,

^,
complete, abundant,
f. fill up, fill with, Phcen. 174*

Plut. 6. 455.
I
I fill up

satiate, E. 6. 7. 4.
1. 6. 7.

disentangle,unfold, 2 Mace, 1 5. 1 7.

complete supply, — .
, , , ,
expanded,i.e.immoderateIy,n.8.7.3.tf-£Tfli<y.

fulfilled,

,
bring to an end.
Cycl. 692.— succeed, A. 5. 1. 7.
is^,^, \,, , , , 3. 6. 5. fulfill,

Att.
Acts 13. 32.
, completion, Acts 21. 26.
aor. 2. '/,

,
f.

, ,
I pass out on the other side, cross I strike with terror, terrify, astound shake

over traverse, for off, dissipate, Thuc. 2. 38. —
they pass through, Od. . 35. aor. 2. 7\ ay inf. -

,
yiu,

. am

,, ,
aor. I sack, II. a. 19. I feel or agitated with strong
escape like a partridge, disap- emotion offear, am terrified, panic-struck,

, , , ,,, ,
point, Aves, 768.

outside,
part, I go about on the
wind round, K. 6. 10. Luc. 3. 4.
I go round on the outside.
Thuc. 4. 125. of love, am captivated of
grief,
ration, I
am bewildered, distressed
admire, wonder at.
,
of admi-

terror, panic, astonishment.

,
wind about, circumvent. ou, astounded, K. 5. 9.
I sail round at a distance, turn ou, c. calculated to strike

, , ,
a ship about to attack, Polyb. 1. 27. 11.

spread out, expand, Luc. 1. 169.

,
, thy ears were stretched out,
f. I stretch,
terror, terrific, awful, Thuc. 8. 92.
adv. astonishingly, Plut. 2. 218.
with admiration, Polyb. 10. 5. 2.
f. ,
go about, Ion. 1107.
~-
-

,, ,,
to
,,
Equit. 1347.

,, , ,
fly, fit

discover,

^,
^,
,,
308.
I fly

II.
aor. 2.
.
stretching out, dilating.
away
for flying, Aves, 1355.
I learn from,

jump out, bound away, Trach. 1 75.


ou,

/
able
wash out.


ou,

beyond my depth, deviate from


mind, Herod. 3. 1 55.
sailing of a vessel from port,
for
shall be washed away, Plut. 1065.
washed out,expiated, Eum.28
I sail out, set


.
sail— plunge
my
,
right
6, the
1

, ,
1 . 1 6.

a leap, a spring, the passage out, E.


'^, , '^,
2. 1. 11.

^, beyond leaping over, too aor. breathe

,
f. 1. I
— Mark

,
great to be overleaped, Agam. 1385.

^,
out, respire, Plut. 8. 238. expire,
I spin out. Att. for 15. 37,— blow strongly, am vehement,
he will elicit, Ran. 586. •;. Thuc. 6. 104.
,
I
,
squeeze, press out, Plut. 9. 667. q, gasping, Hipp. 1438.— breath,

,
I sell out, perf. pass. Plut. 5. 105.

, ,
f.

^;,
are bartered away, Dem. 121. adv. from the feet, away, out of
, ,
5; 145. 25.

,, I drink out of drink up, drain, —


way—
the
I
afar off.
make
, ,,
out, suffice— am
Dem. 1474.
able— put
Theo. 2. 56. perf. pass,
consumed in drinking, Od.
aor. 2.

56.

I
are

fall ,
, &,

.
from— fall from
f. , the
out to be adopted,
it is lawful, Polyb. 17. 9. 8.
the putting out, alienation, Herod. 3. 109.
pluck off the hair, strip.
it is sufficient,

,
p.
hand, drop

— fall from the eyes,
from favour, lose the favour fall
fall
from the sublime, sink, Long. $ 4. fall from , trickle, flow



f.
march out to battle, wage war

,
against, Polyb. 15. 6. 6. Dem. 10.
provoke to war, E. 5. 4. 20.
-
,',
,
rank, am banished or exiled, Med. 450. invade, attack, Dem. 30. 20.

,

,
fall

,
from the basis, tumble, am felled— fall
from my end, fail, Rom. 9. 6. am frustrated
fall ashore, am wrecked, A. 6.4. 1.
for dropped off, II.
ou,
492.
beyond the plethrum, exor-
.
-
aor. 1.
city by a siege, capture, .reduce a
1. 6. 9.

I labour at excessively, compose


with care, Theo. 7. 51.— change, 29. 24.
train up in hard labour, Iphig. A. 209.

-
, ,, immense, E. Elect. 883. The unex- . — consume
bitant,
pected return of Orestes is compared to a
comet which unexpectedly returns after
practise, cultivate,

,
food by labouring,
employ myself, am busy.
I
. 8. 1. 13.
1. 2. 4.

,),
being apparently lost in boundless space.

,, he completed,
I fill

.
up, imp. gfs-
6. 1. 15. pass.
1075.
1 convey across, bring out, Phoen.

I go out, come forth


before the public— go abroad, spread, Luke
2C2
— — — — —
301

,, , £
— swell out, burst by swelling, Luc.
3!)2

, —go out

,
37.— proceed from, John

,,
4. 1 5. 26. 6. 1 29.
on a journey, march — depart, Polyb. 516.
, . 469. burst asunder.

,- ,
1 1 . 9.8. 1. II.

cut up by the roots, extirpate. ?\., , the bursting out, a place

,
ravage, waste completely. excavated, Polyb. 12. 17. 5.— eruption.

,
I

,
a plunderer, ravager. I root out, eradicate.

,1533.
convey out in a ship,
conveyed away for himself, Helen.

yield the means of subsistence,


-, , ,
uprooted trees, i. e. withered, Jude 1 2.

1410.
I cast out, throw away, (Ed. T.
hurled out, precipitated,

,
S. Elect. 514. banish, Plut. 9. 242.

.,
-;, ,
,supply, Philoct, 302. A. 5. 6. 9. f. sup up, Equit. 359.
I supply for myself, obtain, Polyb. 23.
— seek, Thuc. —
, deliver from, Bacch, 258.
,

,
1. 2. 4. 83. expend, 1. 82. f. save from, Od. . 501.
commit fornication, Jude shake off, Polyb. 6. 446. thrust —
,,
7.

,, ,
for honey, E. Elect. 1 75.
out of the clouds as snow,
I fly

II. r.

make
out as the bee
drop on wings
537.
out, effect, dis-
,, ,, ,
away, Luc. 1. 156. deter from, Plut. 6. 290.

utensils,
show forth, S. Elect. 1197.
I remove vessels, strip of its
Dem. 872. 11.

, -,; ,
patch, Hec. 515. enforce, (Ed. T. 385.

^, , , ,
avenge, Herod. 7. 158. change, Bacch. 1059.
I soften, render meek or gentle.
c. distinguished be-
yond others, very signal, conspicuous, II.
. 483. adverbially, most
,rushed out,
1. aor.
I disperse, dispel, Equit. 795.
plup.
II. n.

I draw out, II. .65.


1.

pour out, offer libation, Ion. 1 1 93.


ov, not included in a treaty, ex-
for he

,
, ,,
-,
^,
signally, 2. 8. 31.

/—,
ingly, in

,
a signal manner.
adv. exceed-

I cut out with a saw.


I buy of, Anacr. 10.
,
6, exceeding the proper age

for combating, Luc. 2. 290. exceeding the —


cluded from the league, E. 5. 1. 29.

-,adorned

-,— ,
f.
f. £ *<y,

herself, (Ed.
&>, I
I

crown
having crowned themselves, (Ed.T.3.
, standing from its right po-
adorn.
T. 1292.

^,
perf. part, ,--
she

,
day appointed for payment, 1. 824. sition alienation of mind,amazement, Po-

-,
,,
I desire exceedingly, am
earnestly bent upon, PhcEn. 1692.

,», , , part,
,, , —
lyb. 2. 56. 6. ecstasy, trance, Acts 10. 11.
easy to be diverted from the
dictates of reason, fanatical irresolute, —
,
,
emit, Ion. 119.
I

. . . . — furious, adverbially,
), f. Od. 400.
call out, 1.

,
choose out, select, Phcen. 222. furiously to brave the

-,
, ^, I come out of a cave so as to danger, fight desperately, Polyb. 15. 13. 6.
leave or abandon it, Od. . 515. Nicias 2. lead out an army, Ay. 7. 7.
I honour a person much be- I engage in an expedition

,, , , ,,
yond

,
others, prefer, Antig. 913.
I show forth in the light. country, .

march out carry the war into the enemy's
3. 3. 8. -, , --
,
,
aor. 1.
unfold
Dor.
cause one to tremble, alarm, Hec. 178.
my wings,

,,
fly away.

,-,
>, , an expedition, invasion.
I pitch a camp,
turn inside out— overturn, II. .
I
6. . 3. 1.

,
,
I quiver with desire, 58.— I turn out of the right way, pervert.
she thrilled with admiration, Cycl. 180. - Tit. 3. 11, has turned himself

,,
panic-struck, Polyb. 5. 36. 3.
I spit out, Od. e. 322. aor. 1.

,out of the true way, has chosen the crooked


path of error.
, alienation of
,
,,-,
nor did ye despise.
— askof,Il.*.308.
ov, heard of, divulged, Thuc. 3. 30.

\.,
E^«ry^ff(7-iu,Att.Tr(y,f.iiy,hissout,Dem.449.19.

, take off an impression, tear


reason, perversion.

,
, ,
by fire,
cause a thing to burn out, reduce
Troad. 301. Plut. 10. 402.
, destruction by fire, Luc. 1. 554.
, a cup, a goblet, Philoct.
,
, , , , f.

Pax, 1300. Dem. 437. 14.


excluded,Herc.F.53.
I save from danger, preserve,

heap up, Phcen. 1212.

,,
,^,
,/,
35.

/, ;
yyju
cr/i/<y.


break out
f.

,
dash out the brain, Cycl. 401.
flow out, 11. v. 655. dissipate.
flow away, vanish.
6, efflux, mouth of a river.

in
f.

I
aor. 2. pass,
break out as an ulcer
passion, give vent to, Herod.
,
-,
, —
out
,, , , on the sixth day, A. 6. 6. 22.
aor. 2.

— place
cut off, II.
Att. rra, scare
throw into great confusion, Acts 16. 20.
51 5.

am rendered mad, Plut. 6. 545.


, sj,
away

disturbance, perturbation.

in battle array,
set

out in order
. 6. 1.
.
disturb,

— lay
22.
-
— — —— — —— — —

,, , ,- ,,,,
.

,
,
393

, , , set in array — extraordinary. bolt out, Androm. 361.


Plutus, 34, to be exhausted.
— exhaust a quiver,
394

,
battle array, Polyb. 18. 13.
f. p. — ov, ov, displaced, extermi-

f. aor. 1. I stretch upon, II. nated, (Ed. T. 174.— strange, extravagant.


. 58. — extend —lengthen, Trach. 692. adv. strangely, extravagantly.
move from my

, , ,,, ,
stretch out an anchor, cast, drop, Acts 27. I abode, 2 Mace.
—stretch
30.
^, out my pace, quicken, 8. 13. remove, digress, Plut. 10. 15. A. R.

,
, ,strained the harmony, see Sturz.
extension the lengthening
Nubes, 965, having


3. 14. 1.

out, on the outside — away from,


,
with-
Septem,

,
{],

of a vowel or syllable. 267. to have one's foot

,
,, ov, extended, broad, 134, II. . out of the way —beside, ex-

,
, , ,
,
12. 5.
,,
adv. earnestly,
Luke 22. 44.
adv. out-stretched, in full length.

— assiduous,
out-stretched, earnest, Acts
1

,
Pet. 4.
more
8. , ',
earnestly,
cept a few.
the sixth, fr.
v>, ov, sextus.
I describe in tragical language,
Long. § 15.— exaggerate.
,
untoward, uncouth, Theog.

,
ov,

,
{, diligence, earnestness. 289. £*T(5flfc5r£*idir,adv.awkwardly,Luc.Ep.7.

,
shut out, secure, by a wall, finish ov, excluded from the table.

,
a wall, E.

,,
Aves, 1165.
3. 2. 5.

bring forth children, Ion. 480.


— *~,
is finished,
precipitate, . 1.
Plut. 69, he might have his neck broken.
4. 8.—,
throw over theneck of a horse,

,
,
, .,
, ,)
accomplish, U.
Od. £. 293.

,
Pyth. 4. 35.
,
imp.
286. .
brought to an end, ripe.
I bring,
spend out the time,

bring to a close, cause to fulfil,


-
Luc.
scaly.

Ajax, 53.
1.

(see
make rough,
618, having a rough surface, being

I turn aside, divert,


I turn myself aside
deviate from the truth, 1 Tim. 1. 6. de-

,, , ,
,,
for cline, avoid.
that Hercules should cease from his , a turning or winding, Rhes. 881
labours. — declension — digression.
'•',

,,,
cut
hew,

— ,
,
\, ,
off, separate,
f.

II.

y. 63.— cut out an arrow, extract


II.

burst a string —
cut off the testicles, geld
aor. 1.
a. 460. — timber,
fell
I
cate
5.29.
bring up to maturity, rear, edu-

aor.
I
Polyb. 1.65.
in, —maintain, Ephes.
, maintenance.
— 2. -

7.

f.

,
I cut off for myself, attach, I run out sally forth, II. a. 29.

,
, ,
Polyb. 31. 6. 8.
, a person gelded, an eunuch.
cutting offjkeen, ao. 176.
A. 5. 4. 8.
smite, defeat, with a trident.

rub, strike out strike out fire,

,
I

— strike out mirth, occasion laughter,


, (,) it necessary to have, must
'
is elicit
.
, have.

Luc.

,
, 1.
f.

682.
,

I melt away, ]nne with desire,
cause to waste, Hecub. 431.
wear
2. pass,
8.— wear out life, (Ed. T. 256.—
2. 2.
a point, sharpen, Long. $44. aor.
to
was worn out, led an af-

,
/, ,
. 179. — expose an
,
,,
,

..,
15. 6. 4.
I pluck out.

,
(see riOy/at) I place, lay out,
—expose
publish, explain — propose reward, Polyb.
exhibit.
infant
Od.
events,
flicted life, (Ed. T. 436.
,
v\, wearing out, affliction.

eat out,
I
I
bore, creep out, Eccles. 837.
lop off grapes, gather a crop.
shall gnaw.

,,, ,,, ,,,—,,


having his beard plucked, Anacr. 91. I wear out, consume, Thuc. 3. 93.

, honour greatly, hold more dear,


S. Elect. 62.
, degraded,
the dust, Acts 13. 51.
f.
— over-value, Long. 44.
I
S. Elect. 245.
shake oftj brush away
were
sculpture, effigy,
threadbare clothes.
carve, model, 1. 1. engrave.

Exod.
.
,
28. 34.
make entirely blind, Rhes. 924.
engraving,

,
struck out,
, 348. , a son of Priam, and the prin-
II.

',—

,,
aor. 1. I pay cipal defender of Troy or'Ex.
f.

^,
,
,
.—,
a penalty, requite, Polyb. 5. 27. 7. repay,
Plut. 6. 68 1

.
',
, I avenge, Med. 267.
the paying of a fine, penalty.
I cause to miscarry.
,
abortion, 1 Cor. 15. 8.
of Hector,
a, ov, of Hector
a son
a child, the
very image of his father Hector, II. . 401.
fr.

, a father-in-law, socer ^, %->


I'lKTo^tvo, I shoot out, pour out arrows \
mother in-law, socrus.
,,
3)

,
,

imp.
cause to appear bright, Bacch. 767.
I show
,
I wipe

forth,
— —

/,
——

for -
off,
.

,
,
,

— — —

not of the same tribe, foreign,


ov,
impertinent, absurd, Long. $ 15.
breathe out, snore, Theo. 24. 47.
—— ——
396

,
II. sr.

,,
displayed themselves, i. e. appear,
299.— exhibit, CEd. T. 251.
aor. 2. ^^/, show myself out,
,-
, blow out, disperse with the breath.

— ,,
breathe, pour out, Agam. 1398.
bring forth, produce, Mat. 24. 32.

,
I I
—express myself,

,
7.

,
, .- ),
160.

,
appear distinctly

, , apparent, conspicuous,
Herod.
Phosn. 422.
aor. 2. I spring from,
I am born, sprung

, ,,) ,
ma- from, 948.
nifest adv. conspicuousi)7 call out exclamation.

,,, ,
.

,
,,
inexpressible, immoderate
inexpressibly, Agam. 715. fr.
I take off the bridle, unbridle.
I scoop out, excavate.

(see
,
vilify,
carry out, bring
I
contemn.

,, f.
f.

,,
I erase, Plut. 9. 465.
inflate, E. Elect. 412.

,
forth,
light
5. 6.

,
exhibit,
transported, Thuc. 3. 84.

,,
myself, obtain, K. 1.15.
to to bring out to
carry out to be buried, bury, Acts

, , ,

-
bring out from the mind, express,
I am carried away, am

to carry out, II. . 234.


for

carry away for

or ^, - ,,

9. 17. —
f. aor.

pour out blood, shed, Acts 22. 20.—


1.
pour out, run to waste, Mat.
I
pour out my suhstance, squander

I pour myself out, abandon myself.


gushed out, Acts 1. 1 8. was trans-
ported, Vespse, 1460. is shed

, ,
II.

,
. 368.
,, for

vj t
.
270.
,
they carried out,

the carrying out, burying,


— .
upon, imparted to, Acts 10. 45.

, ,, one who plunges himself


in loose pleasures, dissolute

,, ,
Thuc. 2. 34. speed, impetuosity, , the pouring out, flowing a

,
3. 5.
Cycl. 233, I carry out, spendthrift dissolved dropped —

,- ,
convey away, Ocl . .
4 1 6. export, bring forth from, xl. 262.
,, a thing brought forth, pro- f. aor. 1. I give out

,,
duct, rent, Herod. 4. 198. as an oracle, predict, CEd. C. 88. enjoin,
— —

», ,
ov, brought out, divulged, Hipp. 295. Olym. 7. 169. am of use suffice, Herod.
— — benefit,

,
opp. to
rooted out. see Schutz on Eum. 908.
$,
^,
more to be

let out, suffer to escape, Vesp. 125.


I flee, slip out, II. . 449.
he nar-

- , ,
, ,
8. 70.
,),
3. 137.
exclude from the assembly, expel.

f. %a,
withdraw, depart, Luke
21. 21. give way to, Ajax, 671. renounce.
aor. 1 I breathe .

rowly escaped being stoned, A. 1.3. 2.

, corrupt, destroy utterly


,, —
out, expire, Acts 5. 5.
cool,
grow

,
frost, Plut. 8. 777.

,
I destroy myself, Luc. 3. 323. dis- (from I have, as signi-

,
ov,

, ,,
appear, Pax, 71. utterly fying a propensity of the mind to something

,
ruined,

,
Hec- 669.
I say, Od. . 246.
had been
it possesses) willing, of one's own accord,

voluntary, II. . 43. It is to be rendered

, ',
I cause to waste, often adverbially, willingly, gladly.
consumed, Od. t. 163. EAAA, the olive tree, its fruit,
I blaze out, emit flashes of elo-
', Od. . 116. Ranae, 1019. Phil. 1. 20.
,

,,
made of the

,
quence, Long. $ 12. ov, olive
he has his mind inflamed, is inflamed in

, ,, , tree, of olive, Od. t. 320.


236. s.

,
mind, Plut. 9. 69. <Vc, sj, the olive, Acharn. 997.

,
2 Cor. 10.
,, ], terrified
I feel alarm.
thou alarmest me, CEd. C. 268.
I stain with blood, Phcen. 42.
I wander abroad, spread about,
I terrify,

, ,
%~,
,
7•.,
, , the of
, a gatherer of
oil

a seller of oil.
planted with olives, Ion. 1478.
olive,

olive-plantation, Plut. 8. 78.


.
Mat. 25.
olives, Vesp. 710.
3.

,Plut. 1. 164. march forward, E. Elect. 320.


I am placed on board, ex-
ported, betrayed, Antig. 1048. fr.
I explain, Plut. 6. 84. Prom. 947.
. ', '7., a destroyer of men. ,
pun on
,, ,
olive-plantation.

perf. ,
Agam. 699.
Att. , xvvq, a

^, ,,
f.

— march against — drive

,
drive, urge, hasten

,, ..
explanation, description.

C. 284.
out of one's mind, frantic,
I deliberate upon, meditate,
Thuc. 3. 45.— devise, Nubes, 695.
f. ffi>, I keep from, save, (Ed.
,
away a booty, carry away— drive away
eases, expel, heal — drive a tumult, raise

,
, , ,
drive a wall, build,
to drive, II.
contr.
inf.
v.

poet,
contr. ,
27. 3. plur. pres. ind.
dis-

for Ast-
— — — — — — —— — —

,
397
will drive, », soil. ,, along est, fewest, , the that which is
398

,
the tranquil sea, Od. . 319. imp.
{,
, ,
they drove, II.

,
696. aor. 1. £&-
for

the sceptre, smote#7


.
least,

,-,
the smallest thing,
-, it is to me a very small thing, 1 Cor.
4. 2. I think it of no consequence -

,,
he drove Am»

,
him, for

{, ,
,,-.
199.

to drive, by sync,

,
.
he drove a
ditch, drew out, threw around, . 488. inf.
to chase,
or
very little
,\&$%
adverbially, the least,

than any other, Ephes. 3. 8.


a new comp. of
than the least, more unworthy

-, , ,
disperse, II. a. 409. perf. pass,

,
had been driven, was
02, or to,
.
short wing, finny.
,
,
,,-
driven, II. . 400. 153. part. ij, a stag, hart, II. *. ISO,

,,,
being driven, raised, Herod. 9. 9. ,,
of a stag, timid,
we must ride or drive.

^,
imperat.

— ,,
I drive, lash,
to drive, Od. y. 109. imp.

,he drove, 11.

^,
,
500.
he tossed me in a blanket

— drive
I
&c.
for

drive thy
own course, keep thy own rank, Nub. 25.
am
.
inf.

driven, agitated,
, .. 2.
stag flesh, venison, A. 1.5. 2.

122. —
,
a stag-shooter, scil. Diana.
,
, stag-shooting or hunting,
Call. 3. 262. chase, Crinag. 7.
stag-killing, Iphig. T. 1113.
a, ou, light as a stag, nimble, II. .
light-armed, expeditious,
more light, ,- Herod.

, , ,,, . . ,
1. 5.
Dem.
into confusion, disturb, harass,
241. u!t. 124. 15.
1.


118, to regard with levity,
light in mind, hollow, insincere, Plut. 6.
239.— slender,
make light of

,
driving, 4. 4. small, Polyb. 16. 17. 7.

,9. 6. — excursion, expedition, Herod.


, adv. nimbly, with4. 1. lightly, agility,

,
to take a Od. 240. ride.

,
tyiv s.

, , a kind of , ~, am2 Cor. or


&,
,
its swift flight, Aves, 887.
so called from bird,

, thunder-driving, Equit. 623. — render


, driving horses, Pyth.
buoy up, Plut.
«. 574.
260. Ion.

, I
f.
levity,

light,
I light
1. 17.
airy,
7.

,,
I drive hard,
harass, Iphig. T.938.
II.

-,
. 543.
expedited, Mosch.

rowed,
5.

— persecute,
125.
113.

,
, or
indecl.
^,,
vow,
I desire,
desire,
II.

a. 41.
2.
. 241.

,
II.

Herod. 2. 158. , , a funeral lamentation, a dirge,

, ,,
Antip.Sid. 56.
Equit. 1263.
,
a driver, player on the lyre,
6,


a sort of cake thinly spread,

,
,
elegy

,,,
— mournful, Iphig. T.
1091.
, , a poem on the death of a
person, elegy — a couplet, Thuc.
elegiac poetry, . 571.
132. 1.

,, ,
to be driven away, profane.
>3, , , a composer of


an oar
a fir-tree, pine, abics, II. . 287.

pine mast, Od.


made of pine
.
424. pine beams, r. 38.
t\ , aor. 1.
elegies.

the truth
pass.

,
, little, small, Antip. Sid.
,
f.

by questioning detects crime—


I elicit
— refute error
106.
/, or less, , — reproach guilt expose folly, Ar. — 1. 7. 2„

, , ,,
to, A. 5. 8.

, -,

worse, John 2. 10.

shorter fewer less than some assigned ob-
ject or end, inferior, not equal to, subject

adverbially, less,
or
tyj
— reject, dishonour, II. /. 518.
are discovered, become known, Pol. 9. 22. 6,
, oy,censorious,Long. 4. skilled
in refuting, acute, Luc. 3. 422.
,,

,-
, ,
to have the worse in the battle, to adv. with eagerness to refute, acutely,

,be worsted, Herod. 9. 102. to be less, in-

,
ferior, opp. to

, , ,, , ,
vantage.

or
f. \,
to have the ad-

inferior to another, 2 Cor. 8.


I am

exte-
f.
short

,

of,
1

I lessen,
5.
less than,
:, ,
2. 4. 2.

nc,
,
reproof, 2 Pet. 2. 16.
disgrace, reproach, II.
deserving of reproach, base,
disgraceful, II. . 241. sup.
infamous, cowardly, II. . 26.
, ,—
or
most

, proof, test. ,
. 100.

, ,,
nuate, abate, Plut. 6. 540. I
am inferior, am lowered, abased, John 3. Olym. 4. 30. reproof refutation, detec- —
30. —
am made less by a battle, defeated, tion —
conviction, Heb. 11. 1. infamy. —
,
humbled, E. 7. 5. 6. base men, the abstract for

,
,,

,
, ) , ^,.
-
a blemish, Long. 32. defeat.

Polyb. 2. 36. 6.
,
a loss, Polyb. 6. 16. 3.

, diminution,loss slaughter,
disposed to take the less share,
or to concede his own right,
,
(superl. of
. 9.
least, small-


..
the concrete, II.
'EA02,

, ,,
Pers. 39.

marsh,
,, ,
228.

marshy, Ranae, 351.


.
a marsh, II. . 221.

one who walks or lives in a marsh,

II. .
, and
775. from
growing in a
,
,
3)»
—— —

, ,, ,
— — —
A
,
—————
I
——
400
.,

,
a shout of joy or exhortation. tongue, M. Supp. 945.

ing,
I shout, howl, invoke Mars when

,
going to battle, A. 1 8. 12.

Helen. 1117.

coil,
,
Olym. 9.

Att.
brandish the lightning,
21.
sound-

,
.

9. 45.
7,,
f. , Nem. I
groaning,

-
turn round,
I speak with freedom, Androm. 152.
,
, coming, advent, Acts 7. 50.
, a borough of Attica
u, ov, Eleusinian
solemnities in honour of Ceres observed by
,-
the Athenians in this place every fifth year.
,,

,,
&,,
,
, ,
shake, cause to quiver, aor. 1. pass,
uwotv> II. s. 494, they turned themselves

,
back, wheeled about so as to face the enemy.
shook, quivered, Od. 416. aor. 1.

,— , ^, , ,
m.

- having coiled himself


388. Od.
aor. 1.

565.
elephant.
,
I cause to
be elated with vain hope, disappoint, II. ••
.
, an
, a species of leprosy
.

,
.
round, U. 316.
, which renders the skin hard and wrinkled

- ,,
the earth-shaker Neptune.
,
like that of an elephant, 8. 915.

,
ov, o, and mercy, com- ricta, f. I labour under this disease.

, 13.— sorrow, Orest. 958.


,
,
passion, Mat. 9. 6, ivory, II. . 583.
f. Ion. I -, ov, made of ivory, ivory vessels.
pity, Mat. 9. 27. — spare from compassion, of
ivory-bound, i. e. built

.
ov,

, , ,
II. .
pitied,

, ', ,
503.
Mat.
Att.
5. 7. 1 Cor.
-,
I obtain mercy,
7. 25.
ov, comp.
am ivory, Iphig. A. 562. ha.

,
having an ivory hilt.
with ivoiy feet, tables.
,
,1

Od.

,,
Cor. 15. 19, deserving of
.253. Prom. 246.

,
sheet»»,
adv. miserably, piteously, 11. 408.
pity, wretched,

.
Att.

f. or
wrap up turn round a goal whirl round
I roll,

as a ball— twist, writhe as a serpent, revolve


,—

,
with compassion, Philoct. 870. Isthm.

,
as the hours, 8.
misery, a humble or wretched 29, rolling along the winding stream of
',
, ,
state deserving compassion, Dem. 739. 23.

,) , ,
,
191.
compassionate, merciful, II. .
alms, Mat. 6. 1.
-, ov, prone to pity, compassionate.

, mercy, sparing, Od. . 451. ,


,
life, pass through its mazes,

about to face the enemy, II.


round, girt, Plut. 8. 652.
74.
I wheel

I sur-

£A>7,}i;,^,periodicalheatofthesun,Vesp.769.
adv. in a whirl, rapidly, Prom. 880.
. —

,
as if
a destroyer of
,
(a
ships,
paronomasia of
Agam. 699.
, a tray— kitchen ,35. —
ov, 6, winding way, a maze, Plut.

,,
coiling, the whirl of a pool, eddy.
1.

,
ov, 6, and ov, adv. in coils, like those tendrils or
table or dresser.
and
On this the meat was carved
sent in distinct portions to each, at the ,,
strings which bind the vine to the perch.
',, ^^,most si,curl-

) 215.

,
,
table, II. ing, eddying, the curl-

,,
/.

,
a destroyer of cities, (a pun on
Agam. 699. a machine
used in taking cities, see Rob. A. G. 392. ,,
ing water, a stream abounding with eddies.
curled, twisted, distorted.
ov,
6, a mountain of Phocis, sacred

,.
02,
,,
408.
>?,

', -, ,
ov, liable to be taken, II. .

Gal. 3.
exempt, opp. to
a, ov, free,
28.— independent, 1 Cor. 7. ,
to Apollo and the Muses, so called pro-
bably from its windings
cci, daughters of Helicon, the Muses, Hes.

. 1. a, ov, of Helicon.

,

,,
21. freely, without restraint. curl-eyed,
'-, ov i. e.

,
f. I make free, liberate, re- quick or black-eyed. Damai explains it as

,
store
from

nuous
6
, -
to freedom, John 8. 36.

,
penalty, acquit, Rom. 6. 18.

,, at,
, ^,
ov, c.
— noble-minded,
exempt

deliverance, emancipation.

generous genteel.
the deliverer, Rhes. 357.

free, liberal, inge-


an epithet of those Greeks, who from their
beauty and dignity attracted to themselves
the eyes of others, noble
meek-eyed, black-eyed, comely, II. .98.•.
, ij, curling like ivy forked like
lightning — twisted as ear-rings bent as the


&:

,
, , ,
man, Polyb.

-,
,,
generously—
the depth of a noble-minded
27. 10. see Arist. Ethic,
a,, adverbially, most nobly, very
adv. liberally, gen-
. 8.
horns of an ox, II.

Prom. 1082.
294. .
substantively, a
bunch, twig, ringlet— a forked lightning,

with twisted horns, Philip. 70.

, -
teelly, manfully, Att. 4. 8. 1. ov, 6, revolving, said of the nave
, freedom,
, , Cor. 10. 29. 1

', liberality as opp. to

prodigality on one hand, and


of a wheel, Septem, 205.
ov, vj, the plant helichryse, famed
for* its golden-coloured berries, supposed
otu, meanness on the other, . 1. .. to be the same with the English orpiment,
using a free mouth, uncurbed Thco. 1. 30.
— — — — — —a
401
?,, ,, f.

cease travelling, suspend business, Dem.


I stop for the night, or native of
Dor.

,,
— ,
,,,
-,
Greece— a Greek
n, ov,
-,,
402

-
of the

531. 27. rest, sleep, beautifully said of a
statue on its basis, Isthm. 2. 67. sleep over
a work, loiter, Prom. 58. desist, Call. 6.
48. apparently from the Heb. fb, to spend


,
Greeks, Grecian.

,
scil.
Grecian land, city or woman.
yr„ a

the most Grecian of men,


>, or

,,
the night. the most partial of men to the Greeks

,
'02, , ,
,a wound, ulcer, II. . 190.

,,
wound, produce an
adv. like a Greek
language, Iphig. T. 660.

in the Greek

, ,
f. I ulcer,

,
,
,
per.
wounds,
part. pass.

I
full
rankle, fester,
ov,

,a
covered with
of sores, Luke 16. 20. pierce.

causing wounds, Septem, 404.


slight wound, Equit. 907.

Choeph. 840.

, ,, -fiv
f. I use or learn the Greek
language, A. 7. 3. 12. aor. 1.
Thuc. 2. 68, actively, they
learnt the Greek tongue now in use
6, a Jew ,
-

,
a grecism

,,
sac, ulceration, Thuc. 2. 49. who living among the Greeks used their

,
aj,

,
so;, ulcerous, Hipp. 1355. language, a foreign Jew, in opp. to
— —
,f. I
imp.
drag, pull, haul
— draw the limbs asunder,
lyb. 18. 5. 10.
f.

— draw forth, Po-


tear,
a native Jew, Acts 6. 1.
Greek, A. 7. 6. 7.
,
adv. in

oi, those who presided over


devour, 336. — draw on— protract— the Olympic games, umpires.
impel, Polyb. 87.
II. %.
— drag a female, vio-
5. 3. ,
oi, {)
deputies from

,
,
,
late — tear with words, Nem. 151.
— draw the weight, weigh, Herod. 50.
revile,
1.
7. the several states of Greece, appointed to

',
receive the duties from the tributary states,
and to preside over the common treasury.

,
adv. by dragging or wrestling.

,
,
,, , ,
violence, 11. . 465.

by dogs, a prey, Her. F. 568.


a thing dragged

drag, cause to trail, II.


,
187.
wearing long robes, an epi-
,
.
, ,.,
Asia,

- ,,
,
broad part of the Hellespont, i. e.
and not the
), ^,
, the narrow sea which
separates the Thracian Chersonese from
near the

, ,
thet of persons of quality, noble, II. . 442.

, ,,
II. *. 685.
6, , wearing a long tunic,
(II. j). 86.) which was said to be

n, ov, or

,
ov, of the Hellespont. It is supposed to have
a,

,
-,
for
piercing the coat.
see column 359.
in.
EA-Aot^TTut/^o^ci/jsignalisemyself, Luc.3.190.

,,
myself, Herod. 1. 80; 8. 74.
,
I shine forth. Plut. 6. 140.
I exhibit in the light, signalise

splendour, flash, Plut. 9. 540.


-
,
derived its name from

,,
fable, as it must owe its origin to
and means the sea of Greece.

or
,
the daughter
of Athamas and Nephele : but this is mere

6, a collector of port duties.

deficient, defective in,


,,
,)
(from
indigent, short of,

,Vesp. 1489.

,,
,
-, )
or 6, a poisonous

plant which cures madness, hellebore,

purify with hellebore, Plut. 4. 98.


or 6, a sheaf-band, ,
, Thuc. 6. 69.
fect or imbecillity of their counsel,

^, Thuc. 4. 55, to whom a


thing not attempted was always short of
the de-

-
II. . 553. fr.
{,
to twist round.
I want, am
, short of,
their opinion that they could
succeed — who considered the want of suc-
somewhat

,.
fail, Antig. 592. you cess as always arising from a want of en-

, ,,
have no hope
lect, transgress,
left,
K.
Eur. Elect. 608.
2. 2. . 1. 2. 14.
— neg-
-
,
-,
terprise.

, ,
, , rational, opp. to
>
,,
,
defect, fault.
short of,
that which

. 6. 2. 11.
to,
is


wanting, omission,
1 am deficient or

unable to attain.

,
deficiency, neglect, re- , or
impute, Philem. 18.
I
not set down, laid to an account,Rom. 5.

,,, ,
6, 5?, held in estimation.

,
6, , mute, helpless —
1
is
3.

,:;,

mainder of debt unpaid, Dem. 606.

common
,,
,
talk,
that which
xafca
on the tongues of men publicly complained
,. ,•,
a defect, falling
defective, elliptical.

',
is the subject of
grievances
ult.
ellipsis
fawn, Od. r. 228.
f.

ov, o,
f. ,
, overwhelmed in
a fish.

oj,

I fish, Theo. 1. 42.
a stag-killer, Call. 3. 190.
I lay snares, Bacch. 721.

sad.
, , a marsh, bog— hence perhaps ,,
grief,

', ,
of, Herod. 1. 15. 153.
ij, Greece

314. Orest. 1485.


Grecian, Hecub.
,, ,

a citizen
from its marshy situation
of Laconia, whose inhabitants were the
/, or E^onsc — ,,
toe, marshy.
, a city
'-
2D
,,
Wo
of hope, Gal. 5.
author of hope,
desire,

, hope— hope for

\^,
5.
I
Col.

,
Tim.
1.

1. 1.
— ——

5.— hope for


— confidence,
contrary to expecta-

-

the object
the
,)
prison —

(see
commit seed to the ground— plant,
sow, ingraft plunge in danger, rush into,
thrust in— rush upon, attack, Herod. 8. 87.
I cast, throw into

404

, ,
tion, unexpectedly,

, f.

,
p. , ,
uttering
hopes, giving hopes by his words, A. 1.2. 11.
I hope, expect,


propose,
Itt.
.
2. 2. 1.
8. 4. — aor. 2. ,
throw before as an object of deliberation,

— dash

lay on stripes, inflict,
for ^,, in-

, ,
trust, [on. 348. Luke 23. 8.
fear, A. 6. 5. 10.
for, i. e.
apprehend,

future things, opp. to


things hoped
things
fused, II. y. 139.
a figure annexed to what is
obscure by way of explanation a repre-
into, A.


4. 7. 15.

I
,
at hand. sentation by signs, emblem.

-, v\,

ov,
ov,
hoped
hopeful, confident.
for, Theo. 21. 66.
,,

, q, an attack, Pers. 279.— inroad
the mouth of a river, Herod. 1. 191.
),
\, ,
cause to hope, Od.
I
I hope, trust, II. /. 371.

,
91.

r„ a cheering hope, a lively ex-


.
, —
entrance the beak of a ship, or the iron

,
head of a battering ram.
ov, or , ,',
ov, 6, the beak of

,,
,
pectation, Od. . 314.
or f. I turn, roll , aor. 1. —
-
a ship, a promontory, Herod. 4. 53. a wedge.
intercalary, Herod. 1. 32. that
ov,

,
tumbled down, 11. -. 393. month
inserted to preserve the nota-
,
pass, is, a

,
havingthrown myself at his feet,«. 510. tion of time correct, just as the 29th of
,,, or eiTivf&x, the tail or handle of the February is intercalary in a leap year.
plough, so called as serving to turn it, Hes.
,, ,
a peg to hang upon, «. 176.

rod. 1. 185.

, ,7\,

. 430. a wrapper, Od. . 179.
(, ov, the bed or cavity of a lake, He-

a reservoir a wrapper, co-
vering, Acharn. 1120. Plut. 8. 225.
aor. 2. I take hold of, seize

^, ,
,,
, .
I force into

I dip in. 6
cause to embark,

Thuc. 1. 53. propel improve, O. 14. 4.

14. 20, he who dips for himself, sc.


Mark

the dipping, or the thing


,, .
—,
,
capture, slay

. 501. see

, ,,
aor. 2. ra.
take for myself, select, choose receive, II.

ov, a thing taken, a


I


,, ,
dipped, seasoning.

oil, Herod.
seasoning, sweet-meat.
ov, a sauce-pan a vessel to hold
2. 62.

,, ) ,, ,
I reign among, rule over, II. .

,
prey, U. e. 488. a. 4.
EM, for ,
in. see column 359. 206,thathe might

,
572.
.&,mei
, Ion. of myself, fr. , rule with them, i. e. with a sceptre directed
ipsius.
plunge deep into, Plut. 10. 638.
(see I go upon, embark,
.',
by equity and law.

for
aor. 1. pass. part,
entangled, II. . 39.
II.

,
.

,
sitively,

,,,
,
,
1.

, ,619.— mount

46. occurred
Od. . 4.
it came
— place
enter,

— face danger,
on board,
John 5. 4.
into his mind, Herod.
tran-

2. 1. 6.
/, 26.~,
Mat.6.

,,
I throw my eyes upon, behold,
«Toc,aglance, K.4.4.
I live in, Plut. 9. 152.
I shout in the pursuit of

,
fitted to walk in them shout, or encou-

,
for let

,
ov, ov,

, a shoe or buskin. rage by their shouts, K. 6. 17.


adv. by land, II. o. 505. delay, rest on, dwell upon.
,
stepping upon, things used in
,/,
I
in short, at once, a little.

,,
stepping, shoes or greaves, Again. 954. storm, roar among, II. o. 627.
I
the means of stepping, a foot, Bacch. 739. I storm, murmur at— reprove,
hence embassy. forbid with a menace, Mat. 9. 38. rage, —
,, shoes used by tragedians,

,
,,
Septem, 467. snort furiously.

,.
, ,
buskins. I moisten, foment, Plut. 6. 276.
&), walk
I walk in buskins, ,, fomenting, Plut. 6. 152. embro-
upon, —

,
frequent, Persse, 449. I enter upon cation—a noose, fr. Luc. 2. 334.
,,

,
an estate, take possession of under a false ponderous, weighty thought,
character, Dem. 894.— claim an inheritance Long. § 3.

,
to which I have not a just title, L•- I am thunder-struck,
Dem.
am

,
Col. 2. 18, seeking and stultified, astounded, 413. 10.
invading as his own, things which he never , stupor, stupefaction.
saw, to which he has no right, and of which

,, ) thunder-struck, stupified.
he has no knowledge search, pry into deeds
or titles, see 2. 4. 27.—
foot upon, (Ed. T. 824.
shall land, Lvc. 642.
to set
they &, ,
,,
ov, (,

f.
the foetus, embryo
the young, a suckling, Od. /. 245.
,
I plunge in the deep.
ov, living in the deep, ,
— —— — — —— — ——

,
,
,
405
,,
EM EM
, , 406

,
,,
,
, f.

,
-,
- ,, )
f.

or
stop up, Vespae, 128.
stuff)
I puke, vomit, A. 4. 8. 1 6.
it isnot my part,
according to my opinion.
,
sc.

,
svspvis, disposed to vomit, Plut. 8. wretched, Supp. 1004.

,
— ,
,
514. emetic 6, vomit. I labour in, lead a wretched life.
,
wool-clad, Luc. 3. 542. {, cherishing a strong

,, ,
, —

,
maddened, infuriated, emotion, affecting empassioned, Plut. 6.
, —

, 266. adv. with lively feelings,


<
S. Elect. 296. Plut. 6. 144.
I am mad. furious, pathetically—ardently, 7. 524.

,
, , , ,
enraged at,
adv. for
Acts 26. 11.
from
;, to be deeply affected.
set my mind upon, heed, Od.
,,
, , ,,
,
with a word, instantly, II. . 836. a. 415. , one who minds, a
Att. I handle, knead— force superintendant, steward, Ajax, 564.
,
,a sting I make a sport of, sport

,
into, Bion. 15. f. fo- f.

1 spread over the skin an inflammatory with, Antig. 810.— scoff at, Mat. 20. 19.
matter, Call. 3. , — 6 , mockery,

,
,,
, ,
128, wretched are they on
pour thy burning
scald with thy anger.

, p. m.
rage, or

am
whom
whom

very eager,
thou wilt
thou wilt

-
derision, scorn,
,a
Heb.

maintain
11. 36.
scoffer, 2 Pet. 3. 3.

gain subsistence for them, Dem. 1087. 22.


my children,

&,,
-,
, , ,, —
,,
instigated by keen desire, II. . 142.
f. ,,
I smile upon, K. 4. 3.
-, in tune, fitted, correct, Theo.
E^wat/d^strikeupon, presents itself, S. Elect.
908.
experienced, Od.
ov, urgent, Agam. 195.

400. .

,
Ep.

,
19. diligent, graceful, Luc. 283. adv. in return, back,

,
2.

,
more tuneful adv. or the reverse,

,
tunefully, gracefully, Anacr. 1 3 5. fitly, in the contrary way. con-

?,,,, , harmony, symmetry.

,
trary to expectation.
I exercise in, Plut. 3. 213. prac- or I entangle,

, I am implicated,
tise with care, must practise. ensnare,

4. 7. 1 2. —
I remain in aplaee, stay in, A.
remain in my engagements, keep, ,,
embarrassed, Thuc. 7. 84. Herod. 7. 85.
afford, Luc. 438.

,
I 3.
observe, Ay. 1. I. I —
remain in friendship, exhibit, give, Plut. 6. 164; 8. 528.
am firm, constant, Ajax, 650.— remain in I drink wine to excess, Luc. 1.

, , ,
,, , ,,
virtue, persevere, continue,

, ,
7. 5. 25.
duties not to be omitted,
. 1 24.— commit
intoxication, I outrage,
flagrant acts as if through
215. 1.

.
,
Plut. 10. 281. adv. altoge-
, , , steadfast, per- ther, by all means, yet, Theo. 10.29. ,

;,
6.

-,
opp.
,
manent, constant,

,, ,, ',,(,
712.
, ov,
. 8. 1. 10.
adv. steadfastly, resolutely, Hes.

stable, steady,
Arist. Ethic.
ov, kept in measure or tune, me-
v\.
resolute,
10.
II.

4. 69.
.
441.
f.
imp.

,
sprinkle upon,
work, delineate in embroidery, II. 126.

walk in or upon, Agam. 1436.


I put in fetters, bind, Herod.
.

.
trical— commensurate with, adequate, opp. fixedin theground)

,,
to 2. 4. a mode- firm, solid— firm fleshy pure, undecayed
rate quantity adv. in measure, firm mind, resolute, immoveable firm —
metrically, Plut. 8. 465.
. limbs, vigorous, robust

,

firm signs, cer-

,
•, ,
ov, monthly, (Ed. T. 1 135. tain, indelible, Od. r. 250. firm reward,
or ,
hired, mercenary, lasting, unalienable, II. /. 335.
Plut. 1. 198. a hireling, 4. 156.
— f. ,
— mix
2. aor. pass.
,
-,
adv. firmly, decidedly, plainly,
Trach. 487.

,,
I mix in or with in the dust, render firm, confirm, Iphig.T. 790.
die,moulder, U. 55. .

counter, engage mix in affairs, am con-

mix in battle, en-

, , /,
«^^^,
, ,
ratify my oath, Herod. 4. 201.
lastingly wretched, Olym. 1.95.

, , . 02, ,,
versant with, engaged in. lastingly firm, ever vigo-
they mixed in honours, for rous, Nem. 7. 1 44.
they were raised to honours, Isthm. 2. 43. ov, having firm leaves, i. e. not

,
, , ,) .
480. opp. to

me.
,
,, , having a part or share
partaking in honour, honourable, Od. $.
from
ov, well-formed, opp. to

n, ov, (possessive of
sc.
my, mine, of
it is not mine,
,
— deciduous, Plut.

5. 7. empiric
skill,

A. 2. 6. 1.

,
6, , c.
8. 574.
^,—
skilled, ex-
perienced in, acquainted with wise, A. 4.
adv. skilfully, with
to be acquainted with,

2 D 2
—— —— — ——

,
.

,
407

,
>€, ,
, ,,
skilled, versed
adv. skilfully, Call. 5. 25.
skill, experience.
in, Lye. 1196.
,
,
, .
,
, , full, replete,
ov,
, a net-work, chain,
Att. —
7\,
. 1. 2. 22.
bracelet.
408

«,

- 22, , ,
am skilful in, acquainted with. 614.
,
I sail in, Plut. 6.

,
f.

,, I pierce, fix on a spit, II. 426. . up, Od. 353.


f. fill .

,», ,,

,
with sorrows, overwhelm, . 117.

,
I approach, Trach. 750.— aor. fill

, ,,
,
1. imperat. Att. I strike
— dash, . — strike

,
for bring to the upon fall into, II. 72.
cave, Od. . 404. with surprise, astound, Alcest. 1128.
I go about, visit, traverse. adv. stupidly, Od. . 132.
i contain, the ov, astounded, infatuated, Ajax,
things comprehended, Long. § 1375. frantic, Plut. 6. 651.—

,
8.
1 comprehend, contain. adv. with a blind impulse, impetuously,

,
,
I tread upon, Thuc.

,
3. 82.
to be insulted, Pint. 8. 104.

,.
dwell among, 2 Cor. 6. 10.

,, ,
walk about,

a robe or upper garment


— ,7\7, amazing,
,
adv. near,
stupidity,

, .
amazement.
526. ,
,.
stupified, Plut. 8.981.

,
II.


upon
),. ,
with clasps, Theo. 15. 35.

spread a net,
f.

1. 6. 19.
I stretch
f.

breathe, have breath in me, i. e. live in-


spire or breathe into, E. 7. 4. 32. breathe
aor. 1.



I

^,,,—
,
f. f<y, p. m.

, I stick after, patit —breathe slaughter, menace,

., ,
was fixed

/,
in, Plut. 8. 611. Acts breathe upon,

,
into, I will

,
9. 1 .

,, ,,,,
,
jump, light upon, Polyb. 12. 9. 4. favour, A

,
dr. 5.
I set fire to. - breath, inspiration.

,, am on with anger,

,
breathing, having life,

., ,,
I fire, fire

-
Luc.

.
235.
311.
1. 634.

hence optat.
for
,
,
I fill— swell,

fill
aor. 2.

. .
Achar.
thou,
II.
Lye. 35. Herod.

2. 3. 18.
I
I

put
7. 181. an animal.
swell by blowing into,
inflated, Luc. 2. 337.
fetters
are entangled
on the feet, impede,

, ^, ,
Aves, 1310. myself, glut, satiate,
I fill as in a net, defeated, Philoct. 437.
1. 3. 6. — fill with idleness, indulge to ex- impediment, obstacle.

, )
,, -
,
cess, A. 14. 4. ov, entangling the feet, in the way,
I drink in, swallow imbibe. — Ion. 862. obstacle, 4. 8. , \.
,,

having well drunk, Eccles. 142.
(see I fall, drop in or upon

-oc,

adv. for
,
hindrance, Polyb. 5. 16.
in the way of ,
,,
,
fall into a snare fall upon the enemy, the feet, in the way, a hindrance, opp. to
— —
ter.
attack fall in the way, meet with, encoun-
—happen, arise, 3. 8. 9. become, — our present object, (Ed. T. 445.
things before us,

-
,, ,
3. 12. 6.— fall in a vessel, embark, II. . 3 1 1

,, adv. somewhere here, opp. to


— strike upon as a thunder-bolt, E. 1.3. 1.
,, there, elsewhere, Theo. 9. 6.

,
,
,
aor. 2.
light

266. part,

-,
upon,

embarked, U.

,,
attacked, II.

175.
hit, 297. . 134.
dropped into the mind, recurred to, Od.
for
having fallen to their ships, hastily
.
on the knees, sit in the lap,
I fall
for
.
fell,

- —.
.
,
,
by
,
door in
1. 4. 7.
,—
I make one thing in another, as a
\\. r,. 438. produce, cause,

amass, Od. o. 455.


traffic,
,
insert,

I traffic

belonging to trade, venal,


Herod. 7. 6.
I buy and sell,

for myself, acquire


traffic

,
, —
Isthm. 2. 39. attack, Ajax, 58.

for
sj, a blood-sucker, gnat, from
to drink, x\ves, 244.
- ,,, ,
act of trading, ^ ,,
Mercury as the god of trade, Acharn. 816.
an article of trade, or an
a dis-

,
I intrust, Plut. 4. 350. honourable freight, a freight for which I

, ,,
,),
ficoci, I have a thing intrusted to me.
,- have bartered my honour and my life,

,, ,
,
, 8. 719.

adorn, Call.

I
or

entangle
4.
fasten in
fasten myself upon, adhere, Plut.

— Orest. 256.
fold,
28. — entwine, Theo. 22. 3.
Trach. 547.— bargain, Cycl. 136.

,,
,war, Herod.

—a
a person sold, Philoct. 417.

,
a, ov, pertaining to, useful for
6. 56.

6, — ,,, , , a citi-

,
entangle myself, become zen fellow-citizen, (Ed. C. 1218.
enthralled, 2 Pet. 2. 20.— twist about, I live in a city, am a citizen,
Plut. 4. 80. abide.Thuc.4. \06.oi those
, twine, plaiting, 1 Pet. 3. 3. who live in a state, citizens, Luc. 1. 760.
— — —— ——— — —

,
409
002, , ,
E 410

,
,
,
, ,
,
,,
a traveller, a merchant.
a man who travels in pur-
suit of merchandise, atrafficker, Mat. 13. 45.
barter, falsely represent for gain,
Polyb. 38. 4. 3. I go into,

have intercourse with, Plut. 6. 1 1 9.— travel

, ,
,,
nifest,
753.

guise
open, Thuc.
— certain,
stinctly, (Ed.
in the light, openly,

show
T. 96.
Ion.
,,
4. 85. broad day, Ajax,
or
without

clearly, II. 8. 1. 9. declare,


openly, di-
-
dis-

,
,
,
fic,

-,
-,
,
,commerce,
,
into, (Ed. T. 464.— traffic, Jam. 4. 13.
to, merchandise,

.,
I deal,
3. 4.

9. 9.

commercial, Plut. 7. 650.


/,

Ion.
—goods.
gain by traffic,
.,
.
traf-

4. 38.
make known, Acts
show

,
,
24. 1.
myself, Mat. 27. 53.
, indication, declaration.
ov, expressive, Long. 31.

— appearance, 2 Mace.
display, indication,
emphasis.
3. 8.
I

Long. 19.

,
Achar. 972. fraudulent, Polyb. 4. 39. 11. bring upon— bring disgrace or
. I

,, )
of, a mart, emporium, 3. 3.
a hobgoblin, spectre, Ranae, 295.

,,
ov, (, consisting in ac-
accusation upon, reproach with— object,
(Ed.C. 1044.

,:,
I am conversant

with I carry myself to a thing, rush upon,

,,
tion, efficacious, forcible, useful,

,
18. efficacy, force
adv. actively, efficacious]}', Plut. 3.5 12.
shine in the midst, outshine, Pyth.
8. 39. am distinguished, S. Elect. 1193.
&-
Long. §

,
), ,
2 Mace. 15. 7.

,
ciated effects, Long. 9.
,,
the things
contained, the constituent parts or asso-

bearing in one's self the re-


semblance of another, like, Ajax, 1171.

,
,),
,
set on
or f.

burn, II. /. 142.


fire,
Dor.
374. aor. 1.
-,
.
-
,
,
i], resemblance, affinity.

utter, Luc. 2. 355.

, ,, ,
swelled or filled the sails, for I dwell with delight in a place,

,,
wAij(7f»C? anc l being commutable) 11. «.481.

rest with fondness, Luc. 2. 2.
,

,
a burning, confla- alarmed, terrified, Luke 24. 5.

,,
gration, Luc. 2. 574. Plut. 9. 280.
adv. before in place, in

,, ,.,
I fill, —
convey into or on
satiate
myself— rush upon, 2 Mace.
I fill

,
front, A. 5. 6. 3. that which 15. 7. — become enamoured of, Herod. 1.
is before, the fore part. those 55. for Od. 419, .
who are before, who precede, those in front, were tossed in the waves.
namely the enemy
.
before in time, for- — , the filling with, Plut. 7. 846.
-

feed upon per. pass. part,

,
merly, 3. 3. 23. I

in the discourse before, i. e. the former


— , ,
equipped for piping, a piper
-
,
discourse in the presence, had on his lips a piece of leather, called

,
,
just before and not sooner, Mark 1. 2.
fore in value, in preference above, Gen.

,,
,,
48. 20. John

f.
3. 31.
ov, fore-legs,

wa,
,, spit
be-

anterior, It. 11. 2.


upon, Mat. 26. 67.

-
— prevent itfrom excoriation, Aves, 861.
to
I stop up a hole

rent, obstruct, dam, E. 5. 2. 5.


,
, stopping up, fortress.
,
garrisoned, Polyb. 2. 41. 10.

stop up a cur-


,
-, , ,, f.
falling into, sinking under.
cover over I
a person under a guardian, a minor one
that is held in prison, Long. § 44. keeper, —

,
is wrapped up, Mosch. 1.15. or garrison, E. 1.6. 9.
ov, having pus or virulent matter, endued with, restored to reason,

, , ,,
envenomed, one that had Ajax,306. rational, opp. to - thought-

, -
,
an imposthume or abscess, Pint. 6.
Philoct. 1378, an ulcerated leg.
1 56. ful adv. wisely, prudently,
Polyb. 1. 66. 2.
,
— obtained by
ov, on
burning, Phcen. 119^.
fire,

the pro-
fire,

, ,,
,,.,,,,
ov — ov, of the same tribe,
Od. o. 273.- civil, intestine war, Theo. 22.

,, .
,
^,
,
phetic art, Phcen. 961.
things prepared by fire, sacrifices, Isthm.
4. 108.

into the

bum,
I set on
inflame, Pax,
fire,
137.
throw
200.— native land, (Ed. C. 1450.

John
inspiration,
aor.
20. 22.
am mingled

,
1.

,,
with,

sstoc,
mixed
breathed into,

inflation.
in.

, breath,

, ,
fire,

-,
1

, , burning, combustion.
,
aor. 2. I grow into.

\, , for the fit . 702. fire, II. for as if


vend, hawk goods, A. 7. 5. 4.
I sell,
devour, Luc. 1. 60.
I show in the light, exhibit,
she was grown
nerate, implant, inspire,
' , ,
into him,
Od.
II. a. 514.
. 348.
— ge-
.
- 3.

,
5. oi

,
signify, Luc. 1. 421. show my-
self, appear, discover, betray myself, .1. 4.3.

,,appearing in the light, ma- , Od. .


381, they all with their teeth
clung to their lips, i. e. bit their lips— £
I grow, spring up by nature, \
.
— —

,,,
,, ,
411 412

,,
cling, adhere, fasten
102. Od. .

409.
myself upon, Plut.

, , implanted,
6.
Plut. 11.5.
the sea
things in the sea'
ov, living in

,
Jam. 3. 7. on the shore, maritime.

, ,. ,,,
ov na-
tural, native, Olym. 11. 20.
Jam. 1.21, a doctrine implanted (among
f.

in the room of another


,
I put or adopt one thing
change goods, —
you Jews), which therefore claims to grow barter — change direction, avert, ward oft',

up and flourish in your hearts, as in its na- Ajax, 1079. hath introduced,
tive and congenial soil. imported, 208. aor. 2. pass,
ov, 6, »?, having a strong voice, had commerce or intercourse with, Thuc.

, ,
Stentorian, E. 2. 4. 13. fr. 120.
,-,,
1.
— ,
,
ov, having breath, living, animated, the changing

,,
,
Theo. 5. 80. animation. of one thing in the room of another, inter-

,
-, ,
, - -,
ac, animation, life, Plut. 10. 351.
f. I breathe life into, animate.

EN, in. see column 359.

, ,
J adorn, polish with
change, alternation, Luc. 3. 501.

turns, K. 9. 1 2.
adv. alternately, by
acting with
the vicissitudes of fortune, Herod. 3. 40.
^,

. ,
adorn myself, vaunt, ov, changed to the opposite side,

2,
elegantly supplied, Luc. 2. 266.
, c, yj, devoted to the manes,
become contrary, Theo. 1. 134. Agath. 22.
-7\, aor. 2,

,
f.

execrable, polluted, Herod. 5. 70. crimi-— I bounce at, leap upon, dance, Vesp. 1296.

, , - :,
nal, arraigned, (Ed. T. 670.

,, ,.
offer sacrifice for the dead, institute
funeral rites, Herod. 1. 167.
I blunt, abate, Plut. 3. 369.

I milk in, Od. /. 223.

ov, equal in combat a match. —

, , , ,, ,
,
, ,, a funeral offering,
anniversary sacrifices paid by
friends in honour of the dead, Plut. 7. 103.
Ei»ayAi»A^a,receive into my arms, Luke6.10.
I fasten a javelin in a sling, hurl
by means of a sling,
bound in a sling, A. 4. 2. 1 6.
,,,
to be
hour,

2.

verse,
,
i.

545. II.
on the opposite
ninth,

6. 1. 17.
,
adv. by turns,
for the ninth
e. the evening, Theo. 18. 14.
02, a, ov, contrary, in front, Plut.
,

side, opposite, before,


he who is
sc.

opposite, an

-
ad-

,,,
adv. at hand, recently, Phoen. 206. adversary, Titus 2. 8. that which
induce, urge, Time. 2. 21. encourage,
Herod. 4. 79. Od. .
122. —
bring to justice, ,
is adverse, misfortune, adversity,
things adverse, in opposition, Acts 26.

, —

,
accuse prepare war, Polyb. 7. 5. 8.
Ej/fisy6J!//oc,of,engagedincombats,Plut. 1 161.
the dress of the combat-
,
9.
tion to, against,

, ,
tig. 1307. Luke
adv. in opposi-
II. v.

1. 8.
67. — before me, An-
&,
,
ants fitted for action, Polyb. 18. 12. 2. contrariety, diversity.

,
full of action, dramatic, Long. § 9. a title ov, with adverse force,
of Mercury as president of the games adiierbially, against, II. v. 130.
adv, energetically, with theatri-
.
to fight against them, to face

,
, -
cal skill or effect, Plut. 9. 88.
combat with, Herod.
them in battle, U. 3. 168.
am

,
3. 83. averse to, Polyb. 16. 12. 5.

. ,
ov, airy,
I
dusky, Plut. 10. 29.
combat in, Plut. 7. 269. ,
I place myself before, oppose,
they placed themselves directly in

,
f.

, —
,
,
ov, having blood— ruddy blood- my way, directly opposed me, 8.

,,, ,
thirsty, cruel,
aor. l.m.
, ,.
/, slay, dispatch, II.
«.481. . 59.— spoil, tear, Od. r. 263.

,
^,
an opposite point, Luc.
765.— impediment, Thuc. 4. 69.
,
opposition, Time. 8. 50.
/-
1.

, , ov, indicative of fate, ominous,

. 181.—auspicious, I1./3.

353. just, . 521.
II. I set down
603, to be registered.
Luc. 3.
in writing,

, , ,
,
things just or fit to be done imp. they

, adv. fitly, opportunely,


in a becoming manner, Alcest. 1080.

,,
showed, proved themselves, Herod. 9. 58.
sojourn in a foreign land.

, —104.
auspicious, lucky, OEd. C. 1552. die in, Polyb. 18.24.9. perish

, , f. ,,
I put on arms, fight. in a place — suffer to die, Thuc. 3.

, -
Eya/ij^fo^ii/jIfloataloftjamtossedjOd.l^SO. I lie hid, am treasured up.

, nine times.
anoint with, Plut. 9. 88.
, , conformable to truth, na- does on kitting
f.
I endanger, Plut. 2. 389.
I break, snap as an arrow
its object.
tural,Long. § 15.— adv. in truth, Thuc. 4. 34, from their

,,
in a probable manner, Luc. 2. 71.
ov, in the form of, like, II. e. 5.
being hit the spears were broken, i. e. they
clung in broken fragments to the armour
—— — — —

, ,
,
413 4J4

,
,
,
,
,
, - ,
,
of the wounded,
absolute.

,
a towel —
destroy in. aor. 2. m.
perish among strangers E. 3.

pression upon, impress, Plut.


Att. r*&>, f. ,
•,

I
being the gen.

1. 3.

I wipeofi»?*;^//.
make an
6. 10.
im-

,
up, heat,
inflamed with liberty, Polyb.

Long. §
,,,
I
1
setting

I
on
17. 11. 7.
lighting up.
fire,
fuel, spark, Plut. 2. 687.
disappear in superior light.
7.^-am extinguished.
kindle desire, Pyth. 828. -
to be

,
4.

,, I wipe
Ev-flfro^-i4rf<y,withdrawtoar€cess,Pax,1227.
my nose in.

^, ,
I blaze, flash fire, Od.
132.

,,
.
with torches, nightly, Eum. 1042.

, , pay, restore, Aves, 38. I weep,


f. too), in tears

, ,
,
Agam. 550.

,
explain in writing, relate.

. aor. 1. make for eutjv there was among them,

,
,
,
over, consign
1257. 19.

clad in hind-skins,
my goods

I avail of,
fasten on, Luc.
to a creditor,

having put on the skins of hinds,


Nub.
Dem.
1.
218.
111.

72. inflame, Plut.


Dem.

4.

,
Theo.

bite,
2. 68. fr.
aor. 2.
Hipp. 1223.
n, ov, native, Mosch.
divide among, distribute
I
shower arrows upon, (Ed. T. 203. divide
I put

2. 10.


.
my teeth in,

8. 176.

, ,, ,
in the middle, analyse, interpret, Septem,

, ,, , ,
,,
^—
,
spoils taken from an enemy 575.— tear asunder, reproach, Trach. 804.
slain, II. /. 1 88. , f. , I slay I hold forth in the light,
.
,
in battle, kill— plunder, strip, II. . 155. show, (Ecl.C. 48. demonstrate, 1. 6. 10.

, , in the light, visible, II. v. IS 1. will address myself, II. 83. .


— distinct — like, Herod. 5. 55. or hath displayed many evils in me,

, adv. visibly, distinctly,S.E!ect. 8 84. hath heaped on me, 2 Tim. 4. 14.


, clearness, perspicuity, illustra- , a display, Rom.

,
tion,

,
,
Long.

happy, Luc.
,
, .
,
§ 15. —
view, Polyb. 3. 54. 2.
fixed in virtue
807.
3.
renowned
,
labouring under a curse, Herod.
. —
3. 25. — an evident proof or token, Philip.
1. 28. manifestation, 2 Thess. 1. 5.

peachment, Plut. 9. 319.


im-

,
spend the tenth day, keep holy,
,
,,,
I.

,, ,
.
105. execrable,

,
sv, avy\. carouse, Dem. 1335. 7.

,
,, articulate— distinct, ordistinctly indecL eleven, undecim.
expressed, Plut. 10. 271. , ov, furnished with eleven beds.

I class with, deem, CEd. T. 1211. eleven cubits long.


,
,,
,
II.

^, ,..
2, , held in estimation,
202. full in number, Od.

,
ov,
65.
slaying men, bloody battle,
.
ov, eleventh, II. 1 65.

ov, on the eleventh day, or in


eleven days, Thuc. 2. 97.
.

,,

,, , ,
Isthm. 8. 114. for that

, . I fit

ov,
f. ,in — pitch
I fit in,
well fitted, harmonious.
in, Phosn. 1422.
accommodate.
which reaches the end, perpetual, uninter-
rupted ever,—
Plut. 6. 175.
continuation,

,
begin a religious course, opp.
I use incessantly, opp. to
,
,
,
to

, ,
Gal. 3. 3, commence in, am
initiated, Luc. 1. 5.

,
is made ready
for the sacrifice, E. Elect. 1141. ,,
, perpetuity, continuation.
I perpetuate, continue with.

, perpetuity, Exod. 29. 42.

. ,
discipline myself, improve in. adv. perpetually, K. 7. 2.
my

, ,
take in arms, embrace. I build in a place,

,
I I
I shield myself, Acharn. 368. have been built, erected, Theo. 1 7. 82.
Ei/aero^theninth — £ysirieiOs-,ontheninthday. I bind together, entangle.
II. S. ]66, the last, for a, ov, in the right hand on the —

,, ,
,, dwelling
ringing in the ears, tingling, Plut. 6.
in, Phoen. 1 566.
61.
right side— auspicious—
to the right, auspiciously, II. . 597.
adverbially,

,
, , ,
vivid recollection indwelling fear,

whelming indwelling joys, lively

night in, lodge, Plut.

,
,,
f. \,
a pipe—

I

bitant, Bacch. 1 2 2. -—substantively, a
todwellin,abode,Antip.Sid.27.Hes.#.l29.

,,.
dwell in, A. 7. 7. 4.— spend the
8.

increase in,
290.
torrent,

.
II.

.
12. 9.
over-
inha-
place

283.
1
take hold with the right hand,

Ion.

mitted, probable—

,, ,
I
Iphig. A. 1473. receive, embrace.

as possible, Dem. 283.


f.
I take in hand,
admit, approve, Herod. 3. 1 1 5.
impersonally, it is admitted, it is possible,
Luke 13. 33.

,
things ad-

aor.
5.
1. , adv. as far

or -
.-, aor. 1. set fire in, light I tie, bind with, entangle, II. . 111.
— —— ——

\,
415
having bound to myself
my husband, Med. 162. I am bound by

,.
necessity, I want, need. eVcfTs
2. 3. 5, when he is in want of

-
,

,
,,
——

adv. with justice, Philoct. 372.


reasonably, properly, Heracl. 544.
most justly.
turn, whirl about,
--
416

, ', ,
I
everything,

1. 21.
svheov, neut.part. need-
ful of more, more being necessary, A. 6.

f. aor. 1. - ,
viviiTi,

,
for
turally they
,,
tines, bowels,
move round

II.

,
Theo.

-. 806.
!
15. 82,

things that coil about, intes-


how na-

h'/ifa?, I am in need, I want, Pint. 6. 590. ov, living in

,
, , the open air. at

, ,, ,,
clothes,

Pint. 6. 164.
.
&>%$$»?3
6. 2. 11.
c. sifi^oc,
— needy,
being in want of bed-

deficient
poor, Acts 4. 34. ov-
— destitute,
,, ,
noon,

noon, Call.
II.

Apoll. 4. 13
.
3

6.
725.
2.

or
39.
I rest
for to

,,
noon-day,
about

,, ,
> short of none in fa-
mily, inferior to none, to

,
is wanting, the deficiency—
that which
want,
,
during noon, Plut. 3. 256.

, ,,
dwell, breathe in, Agath. 58.
spend the sum-
mer, live in the open air, Theo. 16. 38.

.
, ,
indigence, O. 8. 2. ov, sitting in the same chariot, an
adverb, c. svfaeesQac, insufficiently, associate, partner, A. 7. 2. 18.

.—,
,
sparingly, Tphig. A. 976. are adv. within, at home,

,
destitute of, in need of, Act. 3. 6. 5. tvheag II. a. 243. x. 378. Theo. 15.

Plut. 6. 28, doing


scantily in their own things, labouring un- ^,
adv. from within, from the city, at home
on the inside, Od. 74.

,,, -
der the want of necessaries. further in, deeper.

&, .
,
Ei/Bn^oc, ov, appearing in the light, obvious, ov, fighting only at home, or on

,
, .^ , ,,
Antig. 405. 1. his own dunghill, Olym. 12. 20.
4. 1, he being manifest that he loved them, I doubt, hesitate,
he manifestly loved them. wav - f.

a disputed feet, Thuc. 1.

, ., ,
2. 6. 9, they 122. to be called in question.
were manifest paying, they manifestly paid, a, ov — ov, to be dis-

.,
less attention. puted, doubtful, dubious adv.
ov, 6, , living amongst his own with doubt or hesitation.
people, opp. to most at- , building, Rev. 21. 18.

,, •/> , , .
tached to home, most domestic, most averse dwelling in a recess, hidden,
ov,

to mix with strangers, Thuc. 1. 70. Mus. 245.— sheltered, Philoct. 1503.

,, ,
the civil magistrates.

,
I dwell among the people, am at ov, , glorious, splendid— bright,

, ,, ,,,,,, ,
home.

;,
2 Cor. 5. 6, unspotted, Ephes. 5. 27. oi the il-

being at home in the body, i. e. alive. lustrious, the great and mighty

,
I scorn, adv. gloriously, splendidly.
thou art scornful of me, Theo. 3. 36. f. I render glorious, glorify,

,
conceived in magnify. might be made known

,
ov, 6, jj, sc.
the mind, opp. to reason brought and received with eclat, 2 Thess. 3. 2.

,forth in words

wait

,,
,
, , ,
,,

fixed, confirmed.
dwell in, inhabit, Plut. 9. 43.

^ , - , ,,
remain
— dwell upon an
in, Eccles. 583. tarry,
object,
cause to decay, Plut. 8. 613.

another, bestow
aor. 2.

—Herod.
imp. —
contr. ovv, I give, put in the hands of
surrender, yield,
give in,
. 5. 1. 8. ,
damp, Agam.

enabled, Ephes.
resound.

ov, in

I
aor. 1. for
they reechoed theshout,Il.A.45.
,, sandals used in hunting.
Call. 3. 16.
the dew, exposed to the night
12.
enable,
6. 10. Rom. 4. 10.
I am

,
,
opp. to

—, , , —,
3. 51.
permit —relax, remit, opp. to
give leave,

stow upon, cherish towards, Pint. 6. 172.


be-

y, ov, giving occasion, instigating

,,
Luc. 2. 226.
ov, .
a handle, incentive,


I become mighty, assume the

I

supreme power enforce, A. 7. 1. 30. ob-
tain by my rank and dignity, Persss, 697.
— aor. 2.
enter into, sink, plunge in,
creep into, 2 Tim. 3. 6. put on, II. 42. ——

f.

, ,
,
,
,
, giving in, surrender, Polyb. 5.
608. abatement, Plut. 6. 311. relaxation.
I drive, chase away, II. . 584.
ov, c.
just, merited, Rom.
according with justice,
— true,
3. 8. faithful,
— 1 clothe myself I enter, pene-
trate into, Plut. 6. 266. enter or insinuate
myself into, 9. 232. I assume the dress
and name peculiar to a master, i. e. pro-
fess, Gal. 3. 27. imp.

he clothed
QSd. T. 1433. — acting with justice, upright himself, wore, Luke 8. 27.
— — — — —— —

,
417
, ,
, ,, — \, clothing, rai- 1087. 22. — cause, create, produce, 1396.
418

&,
,
ment, Mat.

-, ,
,
qoQc
,
,
6. 25. 1
an under
robe, waistcoat or shirt, Trach. 687.
Pet. 3. 3. 22.
1. 4. 5.

, efficacious, Polyb.
was made, inserted,

1 . 1 .
Air.

2. ef-

, ,, .
ov, put on, Eum. 1026.

danger, Phcen. 734.


f. am unhappy — fall into
fective
fect,
— productive
strenuously, Att.
ov, having
adv. with
3. 4. 11.
and motion, opp. to
ef-

,
life

adv. under covering, secure] y,Theo. 1. 4. 4.— active, effective


— profitable mines.
,
II.

,, ,
-. 90.
,
25. 25.— under shelter, tenderly educated,

pledge, betroth, Luc. 2. 825.


army— productive
It
Dem.
is said of money bringing in
815. 15.
soil

men who earn a


good interest,

,
I

,
, , ,
I
aor. 1

, ,,
or
.

bear, bring, suffer


m. qusixx-
carry away the —
livelihood by working, labourers, Herod.
8. 26.

,
prize, obtain, 127. or
II. /. work within, produce, effect,Po-

, , -
was produced, uttered, 2 Pet. 1. 17.
an inhabitant, Philoct. 154.
, — a snare, trap,
ambuscade, Dem. 365. 12. Acts 23. 16.
,,
lyb. 3. 6. 5.
gaged, Theo. 4. 61.

,
selves, are displayed, Mat. 14. 2.
for was en-
show them-

,,
I exert myself, operate,

evehgsva, lie in wait for, ensnare, capture by operating, i. e. exerted so as to be assidu-

, ,
a stratagem, Luke 11. 54. Dem. 836. 12. ous and fervent, Jam. 5. 16.
,/, occupy, Persas, 140. ,, ,
efficacy, exertion, energy.

,
,
^, ,
notice,
I set my eyes upon, view, observe,
Thuc.
f.
1.

I
95. Philoct. 875.
wrap up, Mark 15. 46.
,
a thing wrought, an ef-
fect, a mighty work, 1 Cor. 12. 10.
ov, active, effective, energetic.

,
, ,., ,
imp.
involved in debt, Plut.
roll in,
or tuzitfa, tell,
for
Thuc. 2. 76.
announce, declare,
412. «. 52.
II. $.
9. 302.

,
»,
,
trate,
upon so as to pene-
I fix in, press
Od. . 383. aor. 1. m. --
thou hast fixed thy soul, riveted thy
attention, Luc. 1. 46.

,, , , ,
I drive in— infuse violently, aor. 2. vomit upon,
Pyth. 8. 11. Vespae, 908.
inf. to be in — to exist, found ,,those in the earth, the manes,

. . 239, or ;, imp.
~in,
e»%i>,

it is
A. 1. 5. 1.

often used impersonally,


practicable there is. —
<?,

—not
)
,,
it is

,-.
eitqu
possible,
as , , ,,
the dead, II. o. 188.
further below, lower, II. . 898.
by apocope,
or prep, in the earth, beneath,
a, ov,

adv.

)
beautiful as possible part, Ssoi,

, /»,
{) ?
scil. ?,
the things in hand, present means,
»,
it is possible,

Luke 11. , ,
the gods below, underneath— inferior to,

Luc. 3. 4. below, II. v. 75.

, ,
.
or , (for inti-

', ,
Luc. 2. 192.
,,
41, give alms according to your means, see mation, suggestion, U. ?. 894. Hes. . 494.
,
a clasp, II. §. 180. fr.

,
,
genitive only,

, ,,, , ,
because of, 11. a. 110. iv

,
wherefore, on which account,
on account
praep. governing the
of, for
,,
the sake,
or

, ,,a people of Paphlagonia who


had the best breed of mules. A colony of
these settled on the Adriatic, and were af-
terwards called Veneti, Hipp. 231.

.
for what end ? for for am happy to invite, Dem. 1411.

/,
, , ,
,
this reason, 96.

, )
, ^,
I
springs up, Herod. 3. 80.
am generated,

indccl. ninety, nonaginta.


envy
live

, , -
happy
inf.
in,

I
, (,
Thuc.

pass

,
my
2. 54.
to sleep in, Theo.
days well, flourish.
laid in a bed, Od.
5. 10.

,
seduce,
1411. 10. Dem. 34. bed-clothes, Od. . 51.

, ,

, ,
(Att. for fir. to breathe) a pledge or
written also one who holds in his I 518. Po-
receive a pledge, Dem.

,breath, gaping with amazement, astounded,


mute, Acts 9. 7.
I am dumb with astonishment.
lyb. 6. 37. 8.

, ,, , ,
pledge myself,
I mortgage or pawn my goods, Nub. 241.

6, mortgaging, pawning.

,,
I lay an injunction on the ,
the pawning, Dem. 1162. 11.
goods of a person when distrained by an- imp. have in my mind, have

,
other, and secure them as already mort- anger at, am
angry, Herod. 1. 118. Mark
gaged to me, Dem. 1 197. pen. This action
was called
I work in,
,.
employ myself—
6. 19. — imp. Ion. conceived,
Herod. 1. 118.~-make way in, penetrate,
K. 10. 7. — I hold myself under a

work with a capital, employ, lay out, Dem. yoke, submit to, cling to, Gal. 5. 1 am .

2E
419

,
,
— ——

held in a crime, found guilty, Luc. 3. 241.


— am held in business, am occupied, intent

,
upon, 2. 250.— taken up with, Plut. 8. 518.
— cling to, Eccles. 357.
f. |», aor. 1.

tie together, Apoll. 1. 686. CEd. T. 737.


I yoke,

,, ,,
flect
,
trivance
Mat.
upon, Acts JO. 19.

9. 4.


,,
I

turn in

thought, device, con-


meditation, counsel, Heb. 4. 12.
suspicion, Time. 1. 132.— sen-
timent, argument, enthymem, Luc. 2. 670.
my mind, re-
,

420


-,
, —, ,
,
44. . I sit down, take a seat, Theo. 22.
enter, Od. . 272.
I sweeten, charm, Luc. 3. 588. , the opinions or
fictions of philosophers, K. 13. 9.
ov, held in the mind, dear, minded,

,
,,, , ,
kind, gentle, Tl. q. 204. —
Od. v. 421. longed for, Trach. 109.—
,, , , -
, meekness, gentleness, II. . 670.

,, , remembrance, to

,Phcen. 11S6.

/, ,
. ..
the sides of a ladder, or
the frame into which the steps are driven,
,
of age, adult, sv,
furnished with oars, fitted out.
the recollection, Thuc. 5. 16.
a thing in the mind, anxiety, animosity,
(Ed. f
758..

I put on a breast-plate,
clad in mail, wearing their

-
,

,, ,
, —
unde then, tunc.

E^«,adv.here, there where,quo— whence,
,
then indeed.
then first, as soon as.
,
,
breast-plates, A. 7. 4. 12.

A.
for -, or
5. 3. 12. Herod. 7.
there
112.
is,

,
there exists,

,,
much

,,
here and there here, hither, as as possible.
to this place, hue where, nbi. ,
6, a period of time which it
from the same source, II. .
, takes the sun to return to the same place,

, ,
58. thence, hence, on one a year, for a year,
side and on the other, on all sides svfev, in a year going round, after the

,by these arts, Dem. 19. from this place.

,
, , ,

, ,
,
forth, to
,
&,
,
,
I sit on, occupy, (Ed. C. 1357.
sitting, a seat, Philoct. 18.

,
adv. Ion. for

/, adv. for
here, then
hence, hence-
afterwards, Herod. 1. 109.
lapse of a year, E. 3. 2. 18.

117.
a year
f.

a, ov, yearly, for a year, Thuc. 4.
a journey performed in
a year old, Od. 453.
spend the night, Od. o. 556.
adv. in some places, Herod. 1. 99.
.

,
,, ,-
,,
,, ,
at once, a bit.

\,
a quantity put in the mouth
>j,

to cast up what is eaten.


Equit. 403,

ov, lying in the sun, warm.


,,.
place.
f.
I entangle, II. o. 647.

I sweat
I fix
in, 2. 2.
on a
18.
a
basis, settle in
has fixed himself, is settled,

,
02,
I place in the heat,

,
is warmed, inflamed, Trach. 368.
-
Theo.
-,
&-,
17. 102.
I sit upon, occupy, Helen. 1114.
—, -
,
, ,
ov, divinely inspired,
,
aor. 2. part,
— , - f.

, the inspiring breath, the oracle, /\,


sv- aor. 1. or imp.
or inspiration inspired by — , I put, throw, plunge in, II.

89. — . put
Cupid, enamoured, 2. 10. in courage, infuse insert, thrust into — put
,
1.

,
295.— raise,
,, agreeable to law, legitimate.
ov, to sea, commit, launch, Od.
.

,
of wild beasts, Rhesus, 289. Od. o.

,
ov, full cause, II. 538. will unite,
.

,
&.. —
',
stung by a viper, Philoct. 708. 198. drive, urge, 7. 1. 15.

2, am frantic, am actuated by a divine

— ,
one in number, singular.
ov,

,, ,,
impulse, Herod. 1. 63. Luc. 1. 248.

,,
,
f.

thusiastic, Plut. 6. 50. rave, rant,

,
226.

-.
,
1. 4. 8.
I act
under a divine impulse, am frantic or en-

, , , divine
inspiration, phrensy, Polyb. 6. 23. 4. en-

, —
Luc.
ov, 6,
1.

some,
warp, bend in, thwart, II. S. 408.
sleep in, Mosch. 2. 6.
aor. 1 pass. inf.
numbered with, Apoll. 1. 48. see
plur.
,
others,
. to be

some, quidam.
some things
^.,

, ,, .
thusiasm ,
6, a person di-

adv. sometimes, now and then.
vinely inspired, an enthusiast I reverberate, rebound.
, , ,
,,
,,
divinely inspired, en-
thusiastic, Plut. 9. 40.

delicacies, see Dem. 314. 1.


,, ,,
ov, corrupt, effeminate,

jump,
,,,,, 0&>,fill,
— f.
a river of Peloponnesus.
full of, Od. . 300.
satiate, Od.>7. 221. see
1 lash
with words, rebuke, Apoll. 1. 492. Od. r.
— ),

,
aor. 2. for I

spring upon, E. Elect. 326.

,
11. o. 623. —part,
sprung or lit upon, if
fire lighting on the grove with one
flash consumed it, Pyth. 3. 67.
dash amongst,
ov, having
417.

buked, Od.
•-, ,
for
proaches, II. o. 198.
rage, accost,• imp.

vj,
to assail with re-
enjoin, encou-

. 17.— tell,
reproach, rebuke,
,
for
reveal,
II.
,
II.

.
447.
>?.

402.
re-
,
, ,
,) , ,
421
,,,
— —

f.

press, rush upon, Apcll. 3. 764.


,—
———

I ride in, use the cavalry in.


•, aor. 1.

II. .
1 lean,
437.

have, hold, in my
mind, ponder, think, consider fear, A. 3.
5.
., ,
3.— suspect, Med.
— ., , , 46.
I


422

,, ,, , ,
f. fix, thrust into, II. or. 61 2. thought,
Ey /— &i, f. j?<ra, for reflection, Heb. 4. 1 2. design, notion, craft.

,-
I tell,
o. 546. —

the midst, mix with,
,,,.
announce, reveal, II. .
answer, Eur. Supp. 435.


f. I stand on, place in
1 .
80.

upon,
16. fix
stand upon, am
accost, koivyi

lawful —
c. ov,
common
conformable to law,
subjectto the law, obedient, 1 Cor.
9. 21. opp. to or
sense, Polyb. 10. 27. 8

,-,
Agath. 14. p. adverbially, lawfully, agreeably to the law
.,
,
I

-,
at hand, 2 Tim. 3.
by sync.
^,
1. Polyb. 1. 6. part.
at hand, present

,

,,
Iphig. T. 35.
things lawful, sacred rites,

,
— {

aor. I. m.
. imp. I put on,

,
*
instituted, esta-
.

,
blished, Lys. 268. make war, clothe myself, Theo. 24. 138. see
Pint. 10. 337.— resist, Polyb. 4. 76. 8.— or , a shaker of ,
press upon, am at hand.

, .
the earth, Neptune, II. /. 183.

,
,,
13.

,
upon, Dem. 1082. 26.

, , ,,
feed myself
I
— am impeded— cling
am

I
held in. entangled, A.

urge strenuously,

,
in,
to, Plut. 7. 760.

Mosch.
7. 4.

insist

2. 80.
ov, shaking the leaves of a tree,
said of the breeze, Plut. 8. 881.

, ,,,, a, ov, southern, from


ping, humid, from
ov —
Iphig. T. 433.
drip-

ov, nightly, in the night,


, ,
perform the during night, virgins who

,
f. I

,
Mosch.

,
,
funeral

, , , , , ,,
ninth
rites, inter,
I dwell

Archias, 27.
2. 19.
in,

by sea, Plut. 10. 443.


indecl. nine
fight

tsc, scil.
y\, ov,

fu-
Apoll.
inhabit,

,
1.

II.

,
,
1060.
;. 154.

.
an inhabitant,

-
perform sacred rites by night, Pyth. 3. 140.

the night, i.
Mark
e. very early,
I spend the night,
lodge, said of Cupid reposing on the cheeks
of a young woman as on a couch, Antig. 975.
a., ov, by the way side,
or
1. 35, far
. advanced in

,
,
,
,
neral rites performed for a deceased person

,,
on the ninth day, iEschin. contra Ctes.
. p. 1

,
1 3.
on the ninth day, Thuc. 2. 49. , . , , ,
II. . 260.

or
an epithet of Mercury
as having his statue by the way side. For
the same reason Diana or Hecate is called

., sc. ,, -

,
,
nine years old.
adv. nine times, novies.
at, nine hundred.
ov, worth nine oxen, II. . 236.

,
, the name of a fountain at
Athens so called as supplied by nine pipes,
.,
, ,
those
nets placed near the way, K. 6. 9.
,
dwell in, inhabit, oi
I
who
dwell in, Coloss. 3. 16.
,,an abode a fee paid for
61*
, an inhabitant, inmate,
8.6.8. si/o //, «^domestic, tame,Eum. 869.


,

, ,
Thuc. 2. 15. living in a house, a rent.

,
,, ,
ov, a net consisting of nine threads Plut. 6. 514, the

,,
, ,
or cords, K. 2. 5. soul pays a large rent to the body.

,
nine cubits long, II. a. 270. I house, receive to my house

/, , ,
.
tones, Theo.

sand,
ov, a pipe with nine holes or

,
8. 18.
or
860.
nine thou-
-'-,
,
, , -
I reside, become an inmate.
I build with,

means, Plut. 9. 281.


here denotes the

is the true reading.


and not

, ,
11. f.

—- pour wine

,
ninety ninety-nine into, part,

,, , , .

, ,,
ninety years old. for Od. 472.

-, , adv. for nine days, II. . 5'.


,
I slip,
.
tumble in.

,
, ,
ov,
ninetieth, nonagesimus.
nine fathoms, Od. . 310. ov,
jj, clamour,
ov,
II. y. 2.
clad in arms, armed.

,
,
dumb, armed rhythm, a martial

)
see stupid.

,
,
I nod at, signify by nodding, Prov.

Luke 1. 62.
6. dance, A.

,
Olym.
6. 1. 6.

,
,
13. 13. 123, cased in brass he played
, (for
I
a nod, intimation.
build a nest in, Aves, 1 198.
armed
martial dance.
steps, sc. he performed a

ov,
.
during nine seasons, nine years furnish with arms, arm, Batr. 152.
,,
a medium to see in, a mir-

,,
old, II. a. 351.
Mwn%Ofccttt
ENN002,
f.

contr.
reflecting, intelligent,
,, swim in, Plut. 10. 132.

Qid. T. 935.
6, q, thoughtful,
,
ror, Hec. 925.

f. Ion.
2 2
,

imp.
see
my own image in a glass, behold, Plut. 8. 779.
, ,

—— — — — — — —

,
.

, ,,
423 424

,
contr. or I look upon, be- Plut. 7. 50.— aor. 2. I was sown

. —
hold, inspect,

,,
ceive, Aves, 163.
upon,
1.4. 27. discover, per-
having an eye
Thuc. ,,
in the thigh, said of Bacchus, Bacch. 286.
i^yoa, shiver or stiffen with cold, Plut. 847.
shake, sound, S.

^,,
vigilant, 3. 30. f. p. I

, ov, bound, sanctioned, Elect. 739. dash or strike against, 2 Mace.


/, -
,
,
by an oath, E. 6. 3. 7.
2. 166, a sworn word, a solemn oath
,, adv. with an oath, solemnly.
Olym.

,
14. 46.

^,

shake into, Luc. 1. 668.

utter, Plut. 8. 329.



1 express distinctly,
— declare, show, . 8.

, ,
rush upon, hasten, Polyb. 16. 28. m. impress he

,
2. 2. f. will

—, ,
am in harbour, anchor in, Polyb. upon himself, he will learn, Plut. 6. 492.

,
— ,
16. 29. 13.
Dor.
,/,who
si

one has testicles, not


I go in the track, mark, ob-

serve, trace a hare, K. 6. 22.


prepare a feast, —

,
ov I rig, harness
emasculated, opp. to Herod. Acharn. 1095.

, ,,
,
8. dish up, I

105. —
a ram, or he-goat, Theo. 3. 4.
,,
equip myself am equipped, — 8. 5. 6.

.
, ,
on,
male sheep, rams.

, ,
f.

f.

II. o.
rush upon,

366.
. 486.
aor. 1. waqatz,
.
I
rouse myself,
rouse, stir
am
,, .
chronic,
I hurl, send upon

.
, one who
set a beast of
prey upon, visit with evil, Plut. 7. 233.
grow scirrhous or hard, become
4. 2. fr.
stirred up.
599, a laugh was raised, laughter rose.
EN02, y, ov, also written

change. Hence
or
transposition from the Heb. HjXD, sana, to
by

denotes any period of


for

, ,
,
II. .

,
,dage, cramp, Long. 44.

-,
sow
f. ,
in, plant, Apoll. 3. 1185.
I
disseminated,
is 5. 2. 14.
is

1
among the wise.
swathe, wrap in ban-

.
time when on the change, thus
,,

,
the day when the month changes.

.,
-,
sc.

Achar. 171, to be here at


the change, i. e. on the thirtieth day.
old and new day, i. e. the last day
of the lunar month Dor. for sc. ,, , Luc.

-;, ,.
into, Od.
2.
,,
ov, included in a treaty, a confe-
derate state, Thuc•. 1. 35.

^,
Phosn. 173. at peace.

545.
under a truce,

271. Acharn. 1034.


f.

has been infused


, I

drop into, instill,

18. 14.
in the hour when the day changes
for the night, i. e. in the evening, Theo.
svy, sc. , hoary with
.
, , ,,
6, one who stands in my way,

a rival, Ajax, 103. fr.


,., that which stands

hence or ,
the change or turn of life, i. e. old age
a year, and the Latin —
in the way, obstacle. Pint. 6. 491 ; 10. 363.
commencement, Polyb. 4. 62. 3.

.,
?7,

?, ,
annus, a year, i. e. a period when nature

,, ,
undergoes a particular change. And it is

, ,
remarkable that in Heb. *2 means the
same thing hence
four years old.
: ,,
three years old.
seven
I put on a dress,
Herod. 1. 80, having clothed
themselves in an equestrian robe.
f. , establish, fix in, II. .168.
turns itself in

,
I turn in.

, ,
,
years old. Of the same origin moreover is a socket, 306.

.
II. e.


,, ,, ,
one year old, and probably

, , ,, ,, ,,,
change my clothes, put on.
, concussion, for from
I put on a seal engrave upon.
adv. in a row, Apoll. 1. 912.
a precept.

,
jj,

, Hes. . 678. a bend a bow — draw out a furrow,


,

,
shaker of the earth, Neptune. Pyth. 4. 405. extension.
aor. I howl, place in the same rank,
I
f. %,oj,

from the inter], or or, just as comes enroll with, A. 3. 8. 11. , the ,

, ..
from at, Helen. 375.

,
trees, Plut. 8. 535.

,
lation, see
,
admit inoculation, said of
inocu-

— sub-
placing in the same rank.
Ion.
in this place, in this affair,

,
adv. here,

that part of the heavens,


,

-

,
, there, At. 4. 2. 13.

,
held in bonds, bound

,
here,

,,, , ,
6,

ject, Mat. 5. 21. — liable to accusation, guilty, — then, at that time, hither, II. . 597.
1 Cor. 11. 27. ,
funeral, tomb, Polyb. 15. 10. 3.
J molest, disturb, annoy, incom- grave-clothes, Luc. 1. 367.
. — pollute, Heb.
mode,

,
,
8. 3. 5.
I owe a debt on my goods,
12. 15.
Dem.
, ,,
entomb, embalm, Mat. 26. 12.
6, embalming, John 12. 7.

,
', 1197. pen.

Long. 24.
f.

f. •,
I unite,

I sew
form into one body,

in,
, unity,
wrap up
1 1

in a bag,
ment, Orest. 690.
5.
I stretch on,

instruments, arms,

a blow, A.
— draw in a horse, curb- exert — press a
inflict
II.

draw tight— am vehe-


y. 339.

2. 4.
—— — — — — — — —
425
siege, urge , exert
I stretch, $ , for ,
;, 426

, ,,
myself, II. i. 728, the seat Od. y. 77, put force in his mind, inspired
was lined or strung with silver thongs —- with energy and courage, aor. 2.
TSTfls^ii/o^intent, vehement stretched over— they placed in, laid upon, II. . 720. inf.
or across, said of a bridge, Herod. 8. 117.
— adv. intensely, vehemently, , ,
aor. 2. m.
to put, spread upon, 646.
for thou hast fixed

,
,,

,
earnestly.

ly,

. , ,
intent, intense

,
impetuously, Apoll. 2. 933.

, £»,
— tursveg, adv. intense-
I inclose within a wall, fortify,
,,. ,.
for thyself, indulgest in,

^, ,,
I breed, engender, Vesp. 649.
f. defile,
2. ,. ,, II. .

Acharn. 350.
326.
m.

, - ,
3. 1. 15. had been raised, 6, c. held in esteem,
— dear,
Ay.
. 2. 19.

,, seated or fixed in a wall.


honourable opp. to or
the men in power, the no-

, , ,, , ,
ov,

,. , 6, ,
one who has children, a
parent, Luc. 1. 350. opp. to
,
'/}, bles adv. honourably,
to be honoured or held in estima-

, ,
complete, perfect, full pay,
f.c 5 tion, A. 2. 1. 6.

5.
,
A. 1. 4. 13.

,, , ,, ,.139.

, , fr.

most abundantly, Dem. 219.


perfection, Call.
— adverbially,
altogether, quite, Polyb. 10. 30. 3.
20.
were estimated
f.

cut in
I value, prize
at, Dem. 1036. 12.
,
incision, edge, Trach. 903.
,
. 2. 8.

,
, ,,
a thing
i.

,
e.

, ,
,,
or
when
the state of
complete, perfection— form,
one of the three great principles

,,
of creation held by Aristotle, Plut. 9. 480.
receiving full pay, Dem. 1012.

, ,, , enjoin, instruct, Mark


firm,
, things cut, victims, Herod. 2. 119.
ov,
Herod.
intent

strenuously, Acts 18. 28.


or
4. 11.

vigorous, strenuous,
adv. firmly,

ov, one in a place, an


inhabitant, Acts 21. 12. (Ed. C. 885.

,
,
4. 6. Mat. 19. 7.
Acts 13. 47.

,
aor.
,,
, , ), , , , ,-
,
commanded, commands.
has enjoined,
the things

commandment, Mark 7. 7.

1.
,
command, injunction, Ajax, 567.
aor. 2.
pass, I

cut in the ground,
f. ),
the inside,

I model, carve upon.
within, on
the inside, Mat. 23. 26.
the things within, intestines.
within the wall,
within these, in the number of these.
within the evening, before

, dig
— cut a

^, , ,
grave — cut short a string, Luc. 1. 132.
victim, offer, sacrifice,
,,
Thuc. 5. 11.
evening,
rounded by rivers,
within rivers, sur-
to
-

, ,
within the belly, intestines, be in himself, to be self-possessed,

,, , . ^,

,
entrails, A. 2. 5. 8.
,,
the planking on the ribs of
a ship, Equit. 1182.
,
6, , working in harness, i. e.
mules dragging as well as carrying burthens
willing to work, II. 277. .
within an arrow, within the reach of
an arrow.
,, intestines, Luc. 3. 266.
cause a person to turn his thoughts
on himself when acting improperly, I cover
with shame, reproach, 1 Cor. 4. 14. -

,
adv. hence, from this place (opp. I feel shame or remorse in con-
to thence, from that time) forth- — sequence of rejecting on myself, Tit. 2. 8.

, , ,
with, immediately, A. 5. 4. 15. of this
world, John 18. 36.— from these, Jam. 4.
— —
give way to, Polyb. 3. 10. 3. mind, care
for, II. o. 554.— respect, E. 2. 3. 17.
, , shame,

,
. on and on Cor.

()
this side regret, 1 6. 5. re-

,
that side, on each side. spect, GEd.C. 303. compliance,Polyb.4. 52.2.
,, —

,tercession, 1 Tim. 2. 2.
interview, in-
Polyb. 2. 8. 6. my
I turn myself often
eyes and head here and there, II.
turn
492. .

, , This is applied to a person, who though

, ,
easy of access, affable.

,
, , ,
- clone with art, skilful.
dress eels in beets, Acharn. 894.
melt within, am infused into, S.
I
retreating often turns himself back to face
the enemy, II.
or
546. .
f. —
^,
Elect. 1324. Luc. 3. 346.
I put in, place upon

put in fear,
put in the


f. \, aor. 2.
educate in, 1 Tim. 4. 6.
cated in, inured to.
pass,
edu-
to be
bring up,

,
infuse, inject strike terror
mouth, cram —
put in strength, impart, Luc. improved or generated by discipline, 3. .

, ,
2. 910. —implant, insert I put 3. 24.
within for myself— place on, 4. 5. 1. O. . ov, nurtured within us, innate,
20. 28. imp. he put in, II. .9. 70. f. Long. 39.— brought up, inured to, (Ed. C.
I will pour, Od. s. 166. aor. 1. 1427.
— — —— —— — —

,
,
427
-, ,
&,
run, move easily in, II. *. S85.
quick, rapid, versatile, Long. 44.
Irub on, inlay,
to have the eyes painted,

,, .
,— -,
of, before, Gal. 1. 20. Acts 9. 15.
,,
ESA
adverb or prep, in the presence

cavities or recesses in a wall,


in which a chariot or other things were

-
428

, .,
8.
— —
&,
8. 10. inflict blows,Luc. 1. 19. bruise. placed, a pent-house, II. . 435.

,
life,
, hacknied in, Antig. 183.
sag, the rubbing on, II. 1. 3. 2.
, in terror, Acts 7. 32.
lead a luxurious and effeminate
E. 4. 1. 13. revel, 2 Pet. 2. 13.— wan-

,, , — , —
)^,

,
adv. in full view,
..
34, she eyed him fully
in the face so as to recognise him.
beautify myself, seek admiration
by beauty or dress, Luc. 2. 406. fr. .
,
tonly abuse, Luc. 2. 816. behave inso- put in my ears,
lently, Plut. 6. 703. de- Acts , . ),
,
listen attentive-
an ear-ring.

,,
ly, 2. 24. fr.

,,
licacy, revelry. indecl. sex, six sixth.
EH, )
,,— f.

the way, meet with,


f. ijtreij I fall in
aor. 2.
out
prep, (governing the gen. see
of, with, J)y.
out,
by the
occur meet with an enemy, encounter
meet with a fnend, converse, have an in-



terview with meet with a booty, find, A. ,
works of the law, Gal. 2. 16.
of necessity, necessarily, Ephes. 6.

, ,,
by plunder, Mat. 23. 25. -- 6.

,
5. 1. 11. meet with a book, peruse, Long. from equality, from the principle of

§ 1. act with one party in behalf of an- from which time, since,

,
equality,

,
other, intercede, Rom. 8. 27. — act against,

,
Hec. 33. from, by, my hand,

,
1 1

11. 2. complain, accuse, Acts 25. 24. 973. see .


, ,
, ,, 57,

,
interview, converse.
roll in, fold up, John 20. 7.
, one who conveys a mes-

,
f. sage from one party to another, a courier.

,
prepare, furnish, II. /. 103. I give out news, issue orders,
. — 720. Olym. 3.51. one announced,

,
80. harness, equip, declare, scil.
e.

,
2 Cor.

,
),
3. 7.
f.


adv. expressly,

closely in his mantle, so that his


I

having
engrave upon,
carve,
delineate, paint, Long. 10.

muffled himself
form was
1, , or it

bring, lead out



was announced, E. 3. 2. 14.
,
imp.
ov,
information, discovery.
announced, discovered.
,,

bring out an army, con-
aor. 2.


I

,
distinctly
I
marked,
cause
II. a.

smoke
within, drive out by
smoking, as bees out of a hive, Vespae, 457.

,.
, ,
,
,
Mars, a warrior, A. 1. 8. 12.
Poly b. 10. 26.
insult, violate,
1 63. duct bring out a floch, drive draw out
ivater, derive, fetch, carry out

goods banish, Trach. 300.
laughter, raise
was
,,
raised,

expert
draw out
draw out a wall. •/\6,
Thuc. 1. 92. was induced, A. 1.

,
treat scornfully, Heb. 20. 27. Luc. 2. 144.

,
,
water,
1454.

02,, ,
ov,

.
well-watered, supplied with
3. 2. 5. living in

exist, am by nature, Plut.


316.
water, Philoct.

7.
excite
out, conduct, Herod. 6. 128.

out
jjc,

— the training up,


sj,

4. 9.
the Ionic form, I bring

the bringing or marching


.
the bring- —

, -
, , , ,,
2. 1 7. —
ov, appearing in sleep, nightly

vision, Plut. 6. 632.


I dream

imagine vain things,


,

receive visions, Acts

dreamers, vain teachers, Jer. 23. 27.


,,
-, , ,
,
ing out for sale, publishing, Plut. 8. 786.
the going out of life, decease, 10. 388.


f. ,
expel as impure, Agam. 650.
ov, execrable, atrocious, Dem. 798.

atrocities.

,
a dream, Vesp. 24. keep off with the elbows.

-,
sc. in sleep, U. 56. .
- f. I buy of another, pur-

,
, , -,
,,,
,
interweave, Plut. 5. 18.
cp«yToc,oi/,interwoven,artificial,Theo. 15.83.
Bellona, sister of Mars,

,, ,
, , under an oath, bound by
an oath, Plut. 3. 557. ,
,.
chase^
self,redeem, Gal. 3. 13.
I purchase for my-

I speak out, divulge, publish, de-


clare, Luc. 1. 254. Od. . 233.
I render fierce or sa-

,
. ,
, ,
, ,
a company of soldiers at
Sparta, consisting of 25, so called as hav-
ing sworn not to desert their ranks. The
commander of this body was

, ,
called
vage, exasperate, Phoen. 893. Plut. 4, 204.
— I become
grew wild, became a wilderness, Plut. 1 0. 1 30.
ov, beyond the scope of inquiry
or competition,
wild,

things out of

,
,
which the eye

,, in front, openly,
ov, one who
is
the cavity in the skull in
inserted,

is
II. . 374.
-y

in front, full in
— front
view
the records, Luc. 496.

triumph over, Here. F. 155.


,
2.
I combat so as to overcome,

a commander of six soldiers.


— — — — — —
429
Ef, ,
,, I sing out,
ESA
cliaunt aloud, Luc. 3. 43. , demand of another, supplicate
I
ESA 430

which
f. I dissolve into air, a term by
Lucian, 3. 353, ridicules the Chris-
obtain by intercession, A. 1. 1. 3.— demand
for punishment, Luke 22. 31. ^,,
, tians, believed that in a more refined
who
form they shall survive death.
,, ,-. ,,
,, ,,
, ,,
I will solicit, deprecate for myself, Heracl.
476.

,
six years old ad- , demand, supplication.
, choice, .
,,
/,
verbially, for six years, Od. y. 115.
, ,, sixyears old, Theo. 14.33.
I collect, rally, Phcen. 1176.
,
unexpectedly,
,,
for
adv. for

), ,,
. 3. n. 15.
heal thoroughly
11.

on a sudden,
320.

, ,
Ifetch blood, II. 7. 1. 15. f. I

/, , bloodless, lifeless, fr. ,. — heal my wants, supply heal re-


satisfy, —

,
—take away

danger, rescue,
away what
take away life, destroy, II. . 531.

is
goods, convey,
— obs.

Acts
t'&ka, aor. 2.

10.— take
deliver,
expel — take away
bad, reject,
prefer— take awayfor pri-
),
Od.

',,,', , thousand
hundred, <?,
,
7.
o.

,
, 206.

—take away from — , times ten thousand, 60,000


take away
m.

hundredth.
follow out of
venge, gratify, appease, II. . 36. ;. 503.

",,

,), six
, Ranae, 1065, healing.
adv. six times, sexies
six
six
six
i.
,-
,
e.

,,
the right

,
the good, select, f. I

vate

,
except,

,
strength,
^,
appropriate, dedicate, .
use,
take away a thing from its foundation,
overturn, destroy
.
I. 4. 15.

take away all but one,

take away from one's
impede,
distinguished
-. 5. 3.
gifts, Herod. 1. 148.
2 Pet. 8. 3. 1. road, stray after,

loct. 382.—
I
I
pour out arrows, A.
bolt out, E. Supp. 456. Troad. 444.
2. 2.

sharpen out, make very sharp.


hear cut, listen patiently, Phi-
',.., am
5. 4. 14.

listened to,
imp.
' ,,
he took out, Od. . 56. imp.
^- .{),
Long. $ 23. hear
,,
distinctly, learn, . 4. 3. 2.

, , -,
pass. for f. ),trace out, I

\, from these I took out for myself, se- discuss with accuracy, perform accurately,
lected such things as suited my mind. —
A. E. /. 5. arrange, number, correctly.
,
,
or , the action of
taking away, exempting, destroying,
,,
sky, Orest. 275.
I reach the summit,
^.
,
,
mount the

,man

,, ,
Pyth., &&•/}, an action brought against a
for giving a slave his liberty without
the consent of his master.
, selected — choice, distinguished,
2. 54. , exceedingly, Isthm.
free-

the eyes,
the verbal of
sary to bring or lead out.
f. aor. ,1.
I
),
blind,
f. ,
Od.
I
/. 453.
exhaust by plundering,
it is neces-

take out

, ,^,
1. 93.?fci/£iTiy£,adv.signally,pre-eminently. sack, 11. x. 129. consume, weaken, as a
,, to be taken out or removed, disease does the body, Theo. 2. 85.
. it is necessary to expunge.
2.
, efface,

,, ^,
2. 1 5. f.

,
\J/a,
remove, must choose, II. 4. 5. 17. to be blotted out, forgiven, Acts 3. 19.
JL^utQco, f. ,, aor. 1. in. f| expunged

,
or if pass, take out, pluck
I from the from the records of
citadel, i. e.
out, cut off; Mat. 5. 29.
ger/ deliver, Acts 7. 10. take out to be
buried, remove, bury, 1 Cor. 5. 2.
priate, dedicate, A. 5. 3. 5.

take out of dan-

appro-
take out of
the hands of another, receive, obtain, con-


the public debt, said of persons who had
discharged their debt to the state—

, ,
,
, a towel or sponge a box
of ointment, Acharn. 1062.
, expunging, obliteration.

,,,
, —
-

,,
3j,

vey away, Od. . 84. carry on raise above — cause to avoid.


others, lift up, enjoy, Trach. 150. take off' — I avoid, escape, Ajax, 665. Apoll. 1. 490.

,
, ,
the sails, furl
turn, Herod. 1. 175.

630.

take offfrom its basis, over-

aor. 1. m. for

select, A. 2. 5. 3.
take away into error, tempt, seduce, Theog.

took out for himself, conveyed awa}T, pro-


he

,,,
hence
roll in.
(-,
I Cause to stretch on the
ground as a horse does alter carrying a
burden, O. 1 IS.
or
strip of, Nubes, 3
1 . —32.
a place to

,
1 .

, ,,
cured, II. . 39. Olym. 9. P5. exchange, use for
Att. I
,
contrary to fate unnatural, — change — change my course, deviate from,
impious, II. o. 595. —
vast, enormous un- — —
K. 10. 7. introduce by successive changes,
common, opp. to

368, for
my hand.
E|«iVo«, f.
f. §;&>, aor. 1.

sally forth,
, ,
oioo),
Ay. 2. 4. O. 5. 8.
efui'ffls, I rush out,

Yi'iyjn 7>.,,
destroy utterly, Prom. 669.
II.

flew from
y.
,
Isthm. 3. 30.— avoid by turning aside,
Thuc. 5. 71.

,, exchange.
rescue myself
by changing, Ajax, 4 74. see Phcen. 1431.

I jump from the ground, jump


up, exult, Acts 3. 8. start off through fear,—
431

, .
,, , —

—spring
jump
A
from a
— —

HO.
A

432
,

,, ,
7. 1. 14. chariot, leap adversity, Plut. 8. scil.
down— start,

^, ov, out of the sea.


forward, U.
a
death not in the sea, but on land, i. e. a na-
o. 571.

, /,
one lifted up, displayed, 8. 228.
I spring, grow up, Mat. 13. 5.
-

-
retreat from,
tural death, Od. -. 281. Thuc. 4. 28, he evaded the things
the parts of a ship above water. said by him, declined to fulfill his promises.

, ,
, ,
I avoid, escape, Hipp. 673. I reduce from independence

,•/,
', cause to err or sin, Hab. 2. 10. I
err widely, miss my aim,
fend, E. 3. 2. 6.
2. 1. 6. of-
are mistaken,
,
f.

.
aor. 2. sf-


to slavery, enslave, Plut. 6.

11.
reduce

of men, bondage, Herod.


q,
3.
1 7.
to, plunder, Polyb. 32. 21.
, the enslaving
140.

, ,
mistake, miscar- adv. distinctly, Od.

,,
It. 4. 2. v. 47. fr.

riage, Antig. 564. I show in a clear light.

^, ,
, ,
, /) ,
I obscure, Long. 17. weaken.
reap, Ajax, 1197,
having the root cut off, extirpated.

,, render abortive, I act as a mid-


wife to a premature birth, Nub. 139.
E|«2/oooo i4a;v,amgrowntomanhood,Phoen.32.

pres. part,
22. 8.
1

ascend from, Horn, in Pana, 15.

spread out to the wind, render



rising as the stars, Theo.

,
blunt, weaken,
f. , render
(for
abortion.
I //,
vain, Helen. 32. swell with wind, aor. 1.
was inflated, Andr. 937.

, mild or mellow, I ripen, said of the sun


bringing to perfection the fruits of the earth,
Eum. 928.
-,
I exchange one place for ,
^,
I come up from, Troad. 747.
stand up from the ground, am con-
spicuously situated, Theo. 22. 207. f. m. |-
will support the claims of, Andr.

,/,
f.

another, pass, Ay. 2. 2.— depart, Orest. 200.


266. — pass from one slaughter to another,
repay, atone, 806.
,
I neglect, omit, Herod. 1.
.

, effloresce,
I put forth blossoms, I bloom,
,^

,
f. Pers. 823, arrogance putting forth its
79. it has been neglected by blossoms, hath produced a crop of misfor-
the public, i. e. left unprovided for by law, tunes— emit red am covered with

,
^,
spots,

(
.. . 9.
, of six measures, hexameter. ,,
, ,,
— blotches bring forth abundance.
efflorescence, pustules.

,,
,, ,
I extricate, Heracl. 496.
, the space of six months.
outstrip a rival was beaten
out, Cycl. 624. rival in harassing, Orest. 38.
I expel a disease, heal, Prom.

,,
flowers,
I paint or embroider with
f.

Lev. 13. 30. dress in flowers or


flower coloured garments, Lysist. 42.
I gather flowers for myself.
E%x<jiY pi, part, — f. ,,
—-
aor.
/\, t

,,
, , , ,
482. bid the term carries an allusion to charms

,
thought to be efficacious in healing.
f.

— expel, correct, At.


I force out, I. 25.

2. 1. 16.
.
1.

I relax,
put or send forth put forth
breath, emit, II. . 471.
I
put forth from
the ivomb, produce, beget, Pyth. 4. 176.
by transp. for

, , $,,
E£«j/«ya,bringupfromthedead,Heracl.219.

,:~,

, , -,
f.
— I emerge, Od. . 438.
extricate myself from.
vomit forth, Prom. 370.
-,, —
is relaxed, Plut.

rod. 1. 15.
overturn, 1.
8. 645.
rouse from a den, remove, He-
remove from
155.—
its foundation,
for

,
aor. 2. I raise the boldness to remove,
,
,, , rear from the earth, ion. 269.
|»«4», consume, extirpate, Agarn. 637.
CEd. C. 48. rise up against, oppose, Acts
15. 5. — I raise myself up,

,
, ,
,,
aor. 1.
extricate from, II.

Iphig. T. 1351.
, is exhausted, Pint.
consumption, decline.

.
rekindle, lieht
442.
I

up— fasten from,


8.

disentangle,
784. spring up from
5. 3. 16.


— remove, strike a tent,
open, Acharn. 390.
I lay
up so as to stand upright
I raise
restore again to life, Alcest. 1141.
I pump out water draw out life —
IT.

,
-, snatch away, Iphig. A. 75.
I to its dregs, Plut. 6. 420. exhaust.

,
E|iey«ffT«iy,wrenchfromits6ur525,Phcen.l 1 39. I carry into effect, accom-
,

,
jj, resurrection, Phil. 3. 11. plish—dispatch, U. v. 452. mark out, —
— insurrection — overthrow,

, .
expulsion. cause, Theo. 25. 156.

-, I set out with fresh wreaths,


adorn or crown afresh, Bacch. 1053.
I
I rise,
overturn, Persse, 814.
buoy up— bear up against
-,
'
rendered perfect or whole— ap-
peased, /Elian. H. A. 1. 57. see Lex. Plat.
six palms long, ,
f. , I set free from, release.
,,
433

,
Hec. 1115.

saved from destruction, S. Elect. 1008.


aor. 2.
cated myself, Time.
I
4. 28.

A

disengaged, extri-
shall
——

be

,
^,
ESA
—..>,\'
,,
sell,

Thuc.
one's money, Polyb. 32. 22.
8. 82.
into money,
Plut. 2. 64 9 ,— strip

render myself
II

434

of

, ,. ^, ,,
.

),
299.
I

themselves deceived, Thuc.


mislead, disappoint, U.
/^&, they found
/. 375. pleasing to the gods, appease, O. 5. 3.

,, make out a list of, recount.


enumeration, recounting.

,
2. 2.

--,, }, deception, A.
ov, calculated to
7. 1. 16.
deceive. cient, (Ed. C. 1178.
f. ), aor. 1.

.
I am suffi-

, —-
-,,, ,, ^
likely to deceive the enemy,
deceive, baulk, Equit. ]
this is
4. 12.
141.
abounding with possessions,
suffice the wants of others,
supply, Nem. 1. 47. — satisfy, ,
my
7. 12.
abundantly

,,,
aor. 2. m. could not satisfy
I wonder,
— deceive, %&-
,,
&,
I cajole, wheedle
she might elude, II. f. 160.
could

not.

,,
sufficiently admire, At. 2. 4. 7.
adv. sufficiently.

,
lose sight of, (Ed. C. 171 9. sufficient, abundant, Persce,
|7£;!/6>, drive away, expel. 237. tiuS/PfSich. 338, that
ifsf^-^vc, six cubits long, A. 5. 4. 6. I might render adequate the thing within,

,,
Efossivi/isc/Os•, *, //, sudden, unawares

— ef««•&>« — ,-

gf«-

,i. e. might fulfill my domestic duties.

,
,,
adv. I deny openly, Andr. 437.
,
:,
,
suddenly. (for gys^fro) «/!/»;** a denier, I am

/,
vyi;, 6, h,
s^yis Call. I. 50, the products of one who denies, I deny, Luc. 1. 394.
the bee were instantaneous, i. e. the honey

, disposed to refuse, Nub. 1 1 74.


.

, ,,
instantly grew. snatch from or away, Od. 100.

«,
E|jflsroc«/i><y,
f.
ov, six

&',
aor.
from, disembark, Od. ,w. 806.

|7), '-,
I
times larger, six-fold.
spread out, unfold.
.

chase away, II. £. 763.


efe^s-g^jjcee, I go out
, ), ;, the raising away, removal.
Jew 1 2. 1 7, 1 will remove with
removal, or completely remove,
hang from, Polyb. 18. 1.4. gf-
I attach myself to another, I
.—
«>-

,
EfeiiTbStJ^n), strip off, Od. . 372. hang upon, Hipp. 325.
,,
#7*,
destroy, cause to

//, , Thuc. 6. 96, the rest of the place


-
,
perish, p. m. steep and lofty,

-
are lost, 11. &. 290. projects itself, i. e. is
aor. 2. m. opt. for he will depend upon, derive suc-
. —

,
that they may utterly perish, . 60. cour from, 5. 4. 10. attach to myself,
I

,,
return from, f. inf.
I draw after
— ,,
me as with a string, Dem. 123.

,
for that he should return I make equal or even
from battle, escape death, 11. *. 252. with, from being unequal ; (this change
i. e.
I wash away, Od. r. 387. marked by )
— make an event even with
^^/, am in despair, 2 Cor. 4. 8.
is

— equip,
time, fulfill, complete, Acts 21. 5.

,
E|a7roTmj, expiate, appease, II. 413. . man, Polyb. 1. 36. 5. qualified
|«7<£, I send away, dismiss, Polyb. instructed, 2 Tim.
for, fitly — make 3. 1 7.

— even with my wants, prepare, supply, /-


5. 2. 4.

,,
sent //is spirit upon £», i. e. en-
dowed them with his spirit, Gal. 4. 6. , he had supplied for himself, Luc. 2.

,
r

having six feet, if, ctuj^j. 97. prepare for myself,

^,
I
— am
,,
|6^£/^,

,.
utterly destroy, Trach. 714. Prom. 907. preparing, Heraclid. 420.

),
f. \p6>, aor. 1. I fasten to, supplied with, Herod. 1. 43.
&''&,

,
II. . 51. fasten upon, seize, I g|,
Polyb. 3. 51. suspend myself from, $. 20. I draw out water, exhaust.

), blow up, blow up the fiames war. erf I begin so that others

,
,
push away, repulse, Rhes. 811.
I rescue from under a curse by

means of rites, tEscIi.' c. Ctes.


I strike out the teeth
abusive words, revile, Nubes, 1 376.
P. 113.
pelt with

I am quite idle or inactive, (s|


.

,may follow, take

, &,, for
,
the lead in, move, pro-
pose, II. /3. 273. Od.
/,
S39.
from the beginning.
a leader, beginner, U.
grow weak.
721.

away, said of the oracles, Plut. 6. 621.


.

have

-
.
fallen

,.
,
marks a change from activity to rest or in-
action) Arist. Ethic, a. 8.
no longer delayed, Philoct. 563.
%, ,the first fruits or offering
to the dead, i.e. the limbs of a person slain,
and offered up as the means of appeasing
his manes,
,- |*£*;, I discipline thoroughly,
,
^-,&,,
,
out.

Luke 9. 29.
fully trained horses,
,,^, was adorned, Luc.

startle at, 5. 374.


I
I
.
407.
emit flashes of light, glitter,
he flashed with terror.
sparkle out, Plut.
2.

6.
2.
1. — trim

311.—

2F
,
435

^,
£•

dishonour greatly, CEd.C. 1443.


I parch up, aor. 1 pass, . , ,,,
.

»
is in their
scil. ,
it is lawful to them, it

power, Thuc. 4. 65.


436
— .

,
&,
were quite dried, Herod. 4. 151.
foe, blazing forth, com. <?- 1.

,
I speak out, declare— disclose, Pint.
55. explicitly state, II. f. 61.

, ,
£o?, more dazzling, Rhesus, 303. xwyri. I exclude, prohibit, Andr. 176.

,^,
,
speak out, tell, 11. a. 363. expel, Heracl. 25.- compel, Herod. 7. 139.
move, march out, Luc. 2. 100. draw out, Herod. 1. 141.—
— remove my tent, A. 7. 8. 12. f. ^, I disengage, Herod. 3. 87.— pull out

^, for ?| oeyrijs• ageec, from that hour. the tongue.

,
/,,
,
51.
or ^,^ adv.
—a second time,
I desert. ^,
in return,
again,
he fled

,,,
II.
Theo. 25.
x. 223.

,
Thuc.

,
8. 98.
I

— assemble
^)
hold an assembly out of its
usual place, hold a council on the spot,
in
,
the open air.
-

,
to the arms, took refuge in, Piut. 9. 26. (see inf. for

away the
openly boast, exult, Philoct. 890.
aor. 2. m.
lives, destroy, (i| refers to
take

, to drive away,
324. I drive, ride
chase, II. 1. 4. 16.
II.

— drive
. 527.— expel,
out— march on— start,
out iron, cast,
s.

,in the context) Od.


trate, S. Elect. 1 163.
.
444.— I rob, frus-

rescue from slavery,

,
forge,
I

, ),
,,,
make
was driven out.
bricks, Herod. 1. 50.
they banish,

,
Dem. 100. 8. Ad. 14.
I launch out, hurl.
he has disengaged himself from,
for
1.

,
— procession — expulsion — expedition.
the driving cut

he is removed from, Trach. 72. (see I find a person out


,-,, stand, differ from, Iph. A. 479.
foam out, Agam. 1076.
when guilty of fraud or falsehood, clearly
detect, .
1. 6. 19. Nubes, 1061.— refute,

,-,
^, pour out, Od. |. 95.
I

, —
reprove, opp. to

-/,
disclose, de-

, , Nem.
f. I raise from sleep cause a scribe, Polyb. 9. 5. 6.
10. 85. try, sift,

horse to rear, I-r. 11. 12.— raise up into a free use of my


I make

:,

,
being, bring up, Rom. 9. 1 7. raise up from tongue, am insolent, Ajax, 1275.
sloth, quicken, excite, or g|s- Att. I unfold, open, explain
ygopxi, I raise myselfup,awake,Theo.24.2 1 — unfold an army, order a counter march,
(><, , i. e. cause the soldiers to move in files from

/,
rising up, Polyb. 9. 1 5. 6.
Efsyyy«<y, I give a bail. bailed, the front to the rear, or vice versa, or from

,
,
or released in consequence of giving bail,
Dem. 713. also 394. 9.
',, I eat up, devour, Piut. 8. 1 94.
,
6, , from one's seat, from home, ,,, ,
one side to the other,

detach from, withdraw, Polyb.


,,
I am

carried out in a circle, revolve, Piut. 9. 651


1. 2.

,, 28. 12.
an
away or out, Philoct. 212.
,
a sink, sewer a seat at the out-

, ,
side of a portico, piazza, Orest. 1464.

, ,
evolution,

i. e. a counter march.
draw out, extract
aside from the right path, seduce, Jam.
— draw
1. 14.

,
Ef ala, I see, examine in the light, I know, scil. "hncJ^u it is neces-

,&,,
learn fully, pluper. thou hast known sary to drag up the double spine, i. e. my

,
,, ,
well, Trach. 1005. aor. 2. s^hu, he sides or body, Eur. Elect. 491.

,
,,,
saw very distinctly, II. v. 342.

.
see

, ',
like,
,,
having ascertained, Phoen. 95.

adv. in due order, II. x. 448.

.
resemble,
assimilate.
1. 6.

I roll
for

19.
out,
am made
Septem, 451.
unfold, investi- ,—
, traffic,
f.

violate, opp. to
vomit forth, Od.

Philoct. 306.
sold, betrayed, Antig. 148.
f. ,
I

I strip
237.
render quite firm, preserve in-

sell off,
IL
.
3. 1. 12.
dispose of

the slain of their


I am

gate, . 15.—%,
6. unfolded itself,
',
arms, plunder the dead, II. . 151.

,said of a huge serpent lying on the ground


with expanded folds, Theo. 24. 17.

,I tumble out, Dem. 976. nil.

,
aor. 1. ,,,
dead, Herod. 7. 1 17.— carry out to light,
I carry out the

*/-
.,
,
divulge, 8. 132. perf. part. pass.

, ,,, inf.
part,
for or s?|-
I go out, Od. v. 367. de-

). exported, conveyed away, 8. 37. see

part, Acts 20. 7. .


370.— disembark. This
-,
,
proclaim, announce, Olym. 8. 26.
I

,,. ,, ^,
verbbeingintransitive, differs from the tran-
sitive /,
I am out, inf.
to put or send forth.
to be lawful,
lawful for me, . ',, sume
I soften by charms. z&kxZoutx:

they soften their nature, they as-


a milder temper, (Ed. C. 1258.
624.— ,-
{,
efsr/ it is I may, 1. I instigate, Lysist.
4. 28.^
£$•<?
4. 2. part. |,
being lawful.
with this participle, seems understood.
it ,, I lift myself up, pride myself.
boast publicly, Philoct. 679.
, , , ,,,, ,
437

-,

roughly, Antig. 299.


I know
—— —

well, understand tho-


having come out, Theo. 23.


for
ESH
11. 65.

3.

438

, ,
.), thou knowest. I slip aside or out, Theo. 25. 185.

,,
,ult. ,
,
, adv. from necessity, on purpose.
I pour cut, Acharn. 340. Dem. 945.

,,
extract, from the earth. ,
vomit, 2 Pet.
aor.

, on,,an
1.

ask of,
delegation,
embassy, II.
for
withdrew, U.
Pyth. 9. 77.

235. from .
. 468.
.
-
.
2. 22.

,
I work out, effect, Hec. 1155. the putting away, Herod. 5. 40.
—make —
out
out, explain, Plut. 8. 576.
the ground, cultivate to perfection
my
work
work
bread, earn, procure, E. 3. 1, 25.
— f. Dor. , ,
Efesv, used impersonally, it is lawful,
I inquire, ask
of, Mat. 10. 11. examine, explore, sift, At.

,
,
At.
part,
Luc. 1.

,
1.4. 11.

,

dispatch, Herod. 5. 19. perf.

145. Herod.
finished, accomplished,
9. 75.
3. 6. 10.
. 3. I. 17.

find out by examination, review,

revise a law, lay open, dis-
close, O. 20. 14.— try a friend, sift, Theog.

, , , , ,,
, working out, perfection. 1010. •/\,Dor. for I ex-

,, , ov,
producing, At. 4. 1. 4. elaborate.
capable of effecting or amined, Theo. 14. 28.
cessary to examine.
, —
it is ne-

,
I speak out, declare, for 6, examina-

,
II. a. 204. tion, scrutiny, to make
— I ask of,
f.

interrogate, Theo. 25. a trial of, put to the proof, Dem. 230. 14.

, 61. Od.

,,
, ^, - ,
. 63.
I ask of, II.
668. search out, seek after, Od.

8. 15.
f.

aor. 2.
, I
.
258.
*.

irritate greatly, Pyth.

fall off,
81.

overturn
-, ,
review, muster, A. 1. 7. 2.
r*
-,
counts.

19.
, an examiner, censor
officers who audited the public ac-

y\, ov, qualified to examine, O.

approved money, pension, Dem. 167.


-
12.
17.

,
,, ,
intransitively, II. f. 414. — adv. scrupulously, with ex-

, ,.
having their necks wrenched Dem.

, , Hes. 215.
off, actness,

, ,
a. 174. or six years old.

,,
10.
,,
,
belch out, vomit forth, Lye. 725.
I
pours out, al. 546.
search out, examine, 1 Pet. I.
,
a diligent search.
ever,
106, from that time.

18.
still,

render easy, alleviate, Here. F.


, scil.

point out as easy, 81.


II. /.

,). ,
I leave a place to become a desert I appease, conciliate.
—abandon, desert a post, 4. 4. 7. Plut. . supply abundantly, A. 5. 6. 9.

, ,
I


,1. 307. bring ruin or desolation upon, S.

£2,
Elect. 1016.

,,, ,
see
imp. of they wiped off.

,
I contend strenuously I find out, supply, Philoct.
, very contentious, Eur. Supp. 894. 291. invent, discover — institute, Herod. 1.

,,
,
interpret, Polyb. 2. 1 5. 9. 94. I find out for myself, I

,
, , , ,
I creep out, drag along
slowly, Philoct. 297. A. 7. 1. 6.
discover, At.
they found out, Theo. 24. 112.
3. 4. 5. aor. 2. in.

,
,
, , ,
imp.

, ,, ,,
Hipp. 428.
,
I go, vanish away,
Hipp. 973.

extracted,
— aor. 2.
I
be gone,

draw away, avert,

draw, pull out, aor.


II. s. 112. . 503.
1.

p.
~
m.
,
,
,

I
q,

. 386. — institution, Herod.


discovery, Herod. 1. 67.

manage well,
boast openly, have the glory,
profess to be, Od. a. 406. exultingly re-
,
invention, (Ed.
1.

regard as of little value, despise.


94. gain.

Eur. Elect. 75.

.
enlist,
I come

force, am expelled, Mat. 12. 43.



or go
E. 6. 1. 4. sally forth go out by
come out
of the heart, proceed come out of danger, —

out— march
——
out,

,
late,

of'
Olym.

I
13. 85.
enjoin, Ajax, 806.
hold myself out to view,
the sun, Vespae, 768. ex-Dem.
,
I rise,
1071. — I
said

escape, John 10. 39. come out before the


, overtop, project, Ezek. 42. 4.— |-

,
cel,
come — departure, Num. 21. 18.
public, spread abroad, Mat. 9. 26.
out into being, begin, originate with, 1 Cor.
14. 36. —come out so as to depart, vanish,
-,
/), ,
I boil out, dissipate by heat.
6, one that has left the class of
Acts 16. 19. they young men, or ranks with men as having

, , , ,,
go out unto the youths ; here

part, die. aor. 2. part,


.
refers to
those with whom the motion begins, sc.
1. 2. 8.— go out of life, de-

for
just passed the age of thirty

I lead out, II.


to the end, sf^ygiro
2
one who has
passed the vigour of life, Septem, 11.
806. conduct

2F
he so ,
.

.
— — — —
430
,
,,,
440
guided them
it, . 2. 1. 14.

, in the affair, or
— lead
plain, interpret, say or think, Ajax, 320.
aor. 1. m.
God who had
he so managed
out a discourse, ex-

the son placed him


,,
, I
make out


supplicate
straight, rule,
of,
aor. 2.
come out of one place into another,
come as a supplicant, Od. v. 223.
(Ed. T. 779.
— -
II. o. 410.

,
(i. e. been hitherto invisible) arrive at
in a clear light, fully revealed his character —reach, obtain— reach tuith the eye, dis-

,
-/,
'
,
'

. ,
and views respecting mankind, John 1.18.

ytiTYis, ov,
,,
,,
exposition, narrative
6, an explainer.

indecl. sixty, sexaginta.


sixty years old.
I come through so as to reach the
— sfaj-
cern — reach

full
an arrow,

atonement
, — ,.,
— reach
with
extend, contribute to, expedite a person so
as to gain his end, . 8. 3.
I appease, II. 7. 2. 7. make
for, expiate, 2
hit

, —
Par. 29. 24.

out,

,
,, , .
1331. —

end, arrive at travel through, S. Elect.
s|#7^i/, is ended, is over, Luc. 1. 630.
turn out, come to pass, Herod. 4. 69.
>, beaten out, made of or co-
vered with brass, II. 295. fr. .
ov, ,

Eg tTTTTQfAt,
TTTcta,
expiation, atonement.

f.
,—
s£i%%sva, ride out, drive forth.

--,
,

aor. 2.

Batrach. 210. Plut. 10. 548.


I fly
,
away, escape,
—«

,
'

,, ,
river,
-,,
Herod.
,
h» egress
5. 105.
indecl. for six days,

the mouth of a

Od. . 80.
ov, fitted for change, Od. U. 249.
toflutter after unlawful pleasures,Prov.7. 10.
', sag, habit , —
habit of body, constitu-
tion—habit of mind, moral discipline, cha-
racter, Heb. 5. 14. Arist. Ethic, . 5. fr.
— experience, Polyb.

,, ,
, I clear of whatever is wild or sa-

— equally —
1. 51. 4.
.
^,,
,
/, ,
vage, tame, Here. F. 20. civilize, improve.

, the taming, civilizing.


ov, without a curb, uncurbed, quiet.
ov, impracticable, Hipp. 400.

«. ov, waving
694.
like oars,
.
expanded
f.

S.Elect. 1 200.
1079.
alike,

is equalled, united,

that it might be raised to


an equality with, Herod. 8. 13.

,,
I must claim the equal right, CEd. T. 408.
fr.

), I make equal with — am equal,


,

,',
tvinsrs,
c

E£ik, adv. fo gen. of se- ,


, a commissioner of taxes, so
quence, adherence, abstract of order, called because he decided between the go-
without interruption or exception, in a
continued series,


rvj

the day immediately after, the succeeding


day immediately, forthwith, Luc. 1. 669.
',
sc. 'hpsocc, on
-vernment and those of the people who had
made an appeal when overrated.
— ,-, ,
I remove, turn aside

from a right mind, deprive, Asr, 1. 3. 12.—

,,

Luke 7. 11. immediately after, next to, per. ,,, am
astounded, thrown into
I
he was out of ,-/,
',,
Ranae, 777. consternation, aor. 2.

,
,
f.

,
I send out, resound, per. pass.

has been noised abroad, pro-


claimed, 1 Thess. l. 8.

-,
I heal complete'}-
Elect. 1024.
avert, Eur.
shall remedy, re-

his mind, Mark 3. 21. ova

face. aor. 1.
nished us, Luke 24. 22.
I would
not have been alarmed or confounded,
Ajax, 82. I should not have shunned to
they asto-
. .

displaces,
.

,
-,

,
compense, Rhesus, 872. dispossesses, enervates, Arist. Ethic, y. 11.
,
, ^, ,, f.

-, ,
1 sweat through, liquidum

stercus emittere, Aves, 792.

,
set apart, displace, CEd. C. 11.
— I stand out of the way, with-
draw, give way to, Ajax, 681.
I search out, trace, Hecub. 743.

,
, ,—, ,, ,
—,
aor. 1. m.

.
inf.
part,

from another appropriate, E. 2. 4. 5.

^,—

I take

p. m.
opt. if-
s%$a,
-
f. I am enabled, Ephes. 3. 18.
I put forth, Od.
may be an error for
94. or
'
ov, or oc, r,, ov, fading away, tran-

.

plup.
,, -, ) 3. plur. for sient, O. 10. 3. forgotten, Herod. 5. 39.

, ,
out so as
3.

, , ,
,, , , ,I

,,
go out
to
from
depart

out, for we
will go out; the present of verbs of motion
being used for the future.
— disembark— go
reach the end, terminate, K<
we go
8.
(the verbal of

i. e. associate with men,


it is necessary
to go out, they should go out among men,
1. 1. 14.

I trace
out, investigate, Ajax, 1016. Trach. 275.
.

,,
— ),
inf.
f.
aor. 2. Ion.
aor. — aor. 2.
dreams, Luc. 3. 610.
sift

ov, containing six medimni, i. e.

,
m. I send, put out, dispatch

tisfied, II. 169.— . imp. of


send
out water, empty, Herod. 1. 6. aor. 2. m.

,
they put away hunger, appeased, sa-

put out the sail, expanded, Pyth. I. 176.


he ,

,
,
,, ,
about 12 of our bushels, Pax, 630.

02,
f. I swell out— extol, imp.
I pile up a grave, bury, Orest. 402.
a tomb, tumulus, Here. F. 1332.
ov, , departure, expedition—
-
a —

,
441

,departure from life, death, Luke


way out, avenue, event, E. 5. 4.
S
9. 31. —
, Ajax, 549, to have his temper and
character rendered like to myself.
,
442

,
4.

^
, ,, , departure,
rod. 6. 56. —a farce.
I go out— go on a
exit, expedition, He-
^.,

2. 11.
sj, assimilation, conformity.

I confess openly, Acts 1. 5. Phil.

utter forth praise, acknowledge my

,
journey, march out, Polyb. 5. 95. 6. supply
provisions for a journey, sell, Cycl. 266.
out, travel abroad, S.Elect. 20.
, , gratitude to, Mat. 11. 25.
,confession, thanksgiving.
wipe off, Hipp. 653. I take —

,
, ,
, ,,
Dor.
I stink,

,
I swell
having the face swelled, Cycl. 226.

,
out—

I give out a strong smell,


Theo. 20. 10.
, driven from home, an exile.
,
off an impression, copy, infuse into.
part, of
in the nominative,
understood)
lawful for.
(always used absolutely
,
,,
with e« or sj», being
it being not

as it is not law-
.

,
, change my abode, ful or allowed by the law to go abroad,

,
f. p. I

. ,,,
gf

,
,
remove to, Dem.845. 19. 14. 4. 2 Cor.
,
,
,

, ,
,
, , ,, .,
I
ov, habitable, CEd. C. 27.

eject from a house, Plut. 7. 781.


change
finish building, Aves,
utter doleful cries,
, inflamed with wine—
inflame myself with wine, Bacch. 812.
,-,
my home,
1124.
Ajax, 317.
remove.
12. 4, scil.

.*$,
not lawful for man to divulge.
it is

f. ,
guage, Luc. 1. 336. S. Elect. 290.
for

reproach in loud and vidgar lan-

I name, II. y. 166.


accost by name, II. a. 361.
adv. expressly by name,
which

II.

, ,,,
sion,

,
I sting, inflame with violent pas-
Luc.
stung, agitated

-
1. 315.— -(*
by the furies, Plut.
go, march out,
sc. vaov, she
1

10. 779.
II.

is
/.

gone
am

3S.
.

,,
,
ter,
415.

the rear,
Od. .
.
ov,
7. 1. 12.
35.
adv. behind, in
— backward, hereaf-

destitute of arms, Polyb. 3. 81.


,
,
-,
, ,
-
,
,
,
,
out into the temple of Minerva,

675.

,
f.

drive out of the right way, be-


I
tray, precipitate into, Luc. 2. 3 1 3. Pint. 6. 1 5.
,
384.
carry out, the dead, bury, II.
.

men,
f.

arm myself,

.
,
I completely arm
petrate violence, M. Supp. 104.
.
4. 5. 10.
,
the arming of
8. 5. 5.— exercise in arms, Polyb.

act, per-

,, - ,
I utterly destroy, 10. 22.— armament, armed force, A. 1. 7. 9.

- ?
f.

11. ,. 360. f. pass, shall be extirpated, Acts I see from, so as di-


3. 23. 2. stinctly to be seen, Heracl. 675.
..
, ,
, — —

,
I slip out. exasperate, 3. 3. 7.

,
,
'

,
oi

-
his liver dropped out, II. . 478.

,
out of danger, escape, Pro v. 12. 14.
slip
for '

I become enraged,
I make out
I set myself
9. 2.
straight
right,
— correct,
direct or

,
,, , , ,
render smooth and even, plane,
polish what is rugged. v\pr„
regulate thy own life, Antig. 83.
exterminate, banish, Hipp. 1381.

,
,
sublimities uniformly sustained, not marked

,,
^, ,
by inequalities of genius, Long. 9.
or

q$e
,
shower out upon.
a crowd of attendants,
this procession of
ESOPK02,
, 6, ', banished, Dem. 348. 27.

I stir up, drive away as a dog does


by barking, Agam. 1642.

,—
, 6, the exaction of an oath,

a solemn oath, Olym. 13. 139.

,
strangers is his retinue, Trach. 981. f. f. I force to

,
I associate with men beyond the swear, for let
my own friends*- converse, them bind by an oath, Thuc. 5. 47.

,
circle corre-
of
spond with foreigners, Plut. 2. 9. win, Po- — , , the being bound by an oath,

, , ,, ,
lyb. 7. 4. 6. —
crowd around, Cycl. 516. an exacted oath, Herod. 4. 154.
I take out, open, the eyes. f|- I bind by a solemn oath, adjure,

he is become quick-eyed, Plut. Plut. 6. 665. Mat. 26. 63. hence exorcise.
,
635.
— ,, , ,
the exaction of an oath.

,
, ,
sign, refuse,

,
deny on an oath.
thou swear, Antig. 541.
wilt

he disowned the composition, Plut. 8.420.


adv. from the same place.
make very
f.

like, assimilate,
, ,.
I re-

- 1. 16.
-yic,

out, Od.

.
6, one who pretended to expel

demons or cure diseases by using a solemn


oath, an exorcist, conjuror, Acts 19. 13.
I excite, exhort, instigate, A. 3.

steer from the right course, rush


221.— march out, .
,
I 3. 5. 8.
I am assimilated, assimilate my- — hasten, Thesm. 666. I march
self, conform to. ecu. out, sally forth, . 3. 3. 8.
— — — — — — — —

,
443

,
depart from harbour, set sail
I
start away, withdraw, Phcen. 853. carry
EST

,
,
-,
,
, f. yield,
US a
produce water by oozing
or filtrating through the sand, Plut. 9. 557.
444

,
, , ,
out, export, Helen. 1 263.
,
one who sailed from, Hipp. ] 57.

,
, ,
, .
I bark out, snarl at, Plut. 5. 590.
aor. 2. rose up from

,
, ,
out, 11.

by digging, extirpate
2, 4. — dig out
spring forth, jump out.
for
y. 326.
Att. f.

escape, Od.
the lot bolted
47.
,
I dig out, take out
—lay open a
.

the eyes, pull out, Gal. 4. 15.


roof, Mark
,
under,

,
II. .
aor. 1.
267.

adv. above, Philoct. 29.


, roused from
awaken —
death, restore to
,
raise
life, John
,
I advise, suggest.

sleep, Acts 16. 27.


from the sleep of
11. 11.

,
lead a dance, Dem. 614. 22.
I f. face upwards
I raise my

,,.,
,
of the
,
dance out of time, miss, violate truth,
Plut. 9. 441.— divulge, Luc. 1. 601.

, encourage, stimulate, E. Supp. 24.

, shell,
smell, stink,
I

Herod.
,,
a ten years banishment.
Theo.
banish a person by means
8. 78. — expel.
20. 10.
while walking, walk stately, Luc. 1. 639.
turn up or lay open a victim to examine

— weave
f. ,
it, anatyse, interpret, Septem, 679.

weave
construct, O. 7. 34.
cells,
an ode, compose, Nem. 4. 71. tip
Pyth. 4. 490, the
out, finish weaving
— weave

, , - ,,
,
This was voted at Athens against those graces of these things are woven for thee,
men only whose influence being great might these virtues are conferred on thee as gar-

,
interfere with the liberties of the people.
, lands woven by the graces.
,
a web, Eur. Elect. 539.

,
Efow f. f. set aside
'/,\?.<\
, no out or away, (Ed. C. 1080.

/, , . .
as of value, despise, perf. pass,
part, despised, of no adv. without, on the outside out of —
value, despicable, 1 Cor. 6. 4. aor. 1. part. doors, 0. 7. 22. —
on the outside of a coun-
set aside, rejected, Acts 6. 4. try, beyond, farther offj
,.
4. 4. 1. opp. to
aor.

, ,
,), ,, ,
, ,,,
1. pass,
or set at nought, Mark 9. 1 2.
r„ ejectment.
tion of ejectment, Dem. 528. 12.
,
, power, authority,
should be
,
, \.
vilified

Mark
an ac-

3.
sc.
the hare has its
eyes out, i. e. has prominent eyes, K. 5. 26.
into cities
that are without, i. e. foreign cities,
scil. ,
the outward man,

,15. —

, , - ,, ,
pality,

, ,
right,

thority over a

others, Luke 22. 25.


liberty,
dominion, Col.
woman,
exercise authority over
f.

have an independent
right to use, 1 Cor. 7. 4. oppress
I am subjected to the power of
I
John


1.
10.
13.
veil, 1


18.— princi-
—mark of au-
Cor. 11. 10.
namely the body, Rom. 7. 21.
from without, externally,
outside in appearance, Mat. 23. 28.
adv.
the

things without the subject, things fo-

,,
reign or inappropriate, Long. § 7.
f. aor. Att.
1.
force out the eyes9
I drive,
-

, f.

,
,
another,
12,

,
knowledge
I

, ^,
will
his authority.
he ad-
increase, imp.
vanced beyond the usual portion, Od. o. 1 8.
1 Cor. 6.

not be controlled by any, or ac-

?*?,
.
II. f. 493. —
exterminate, Acts 7. 45.
away an enemy, rout drive ashore, cause
to drift to, Thuc. 2. 90.
per. pass,
3. 140.
,

drive


extract, II. . 694.
he is driven away, Luc.

,, ,
1 9.. —
surpassing others
stinguished, II.
op,
188.
,
having prominent eyes,
open to the eyes, manifest.
eminent, di-
.
prominent, Long. —

,
sperate, ah. 193.

,
c. abandoned, de-

utterly destroyed, He-
rod. 7. 10. utterly, Pax, 1072. destructive,
Plutus, 443.
-
1 7.

,, adv. eminently, exceed-


,, , ,
vj, utter ruin,
ingly, II. S. 61. top, eminence.
to those who are in high

,
authority, nobles or chief magistrates, Acts ,, he swore by destruction, he bound
himself by the bitterest curses, Dem. 553. 1 7.
q, a jacket used by menials,

,
,
25. 23.

$ ,
Long.

S. Elect. 295.
aKho
rem

1.
the prominent part
of discourse, the sublime in composition,

with overbearing insolence,


I act

I treat contemptuously,
if they committed no
,
,
,
,
-,
,
,,
.
.
which being short and without sleeves left
the arm and body free for labour, Vespae,
442.
the shoulders
f.

, buy
I make bare up to

denial
a menial.
, jacket-making,
,
en oath,
2. 7. 5.

,.
other outrage, Luc. 3. 374. out, redeem, Luc. 3. 332.

-,
I
Thuc. 2, they would not have are redeemed, compensated,
proceeded to this pitch of insolence, Long. 36.
the low, the vile in composition, , out of sight, absent, Med. 623.
opp. to gone out, Thesm. 888. , -.

445
,, , beyond the bloom of youth, de-

Mat. 21. 19. ,
, upon peace, in
446

,
cayed, Luc. 1.133. unseasonable, S. Elect. time of peace, during peace, Herod. 8. 44.
here means things that II. . 797. Luke 3. 2, upon,
620. or rather
-
ought to have been made sooner, late,

-,
protract, loiter over, Prom. 17.
This and not is the true reading.
-..
,
in,

,
during the priesthood of Annas,
Mat. 4. 6, upon their hands, in their
hands, Rev. 11. 6, upon
, the driver out, expeller, an
6,
epithet of Mars as invading a country and

.
,
the waters, over the waters,

, scil.
upon which place, in which, where,
', -

,,
Rhesus, 322.

external,
a, ov, (comparative of
,)
expelling by violence its rightful inhabitants,

outer,
that darkness
Luke

, ,
so as to
Ephes.
4. 29.
have
4. 6.
all

Dem. 1392,
who

I
is

under him, above, over


upon

will
-
all,
all,

utter

,, ,
which is on the outside of a place illumined
in the night of a festival, darkness con-
trasted with light, and therefore intense
darkness, Mat. 8. 12.
most, utmost.
the outer-

, ov, on the outside, superficial.


",
the popular writings of
praises

slaves, ,
common upon

"
,
concerning all.

to himself, by himself, Herod.


upon
all,

Plat. Leg.
7. p. 332, what we said upon the slaves,
upon the subject of slaves, concerning
himself, peculiar

minding that only


9. 38. '
Aristotle, in contradistinction to those which is upon themselves, which concerns
-

,
called which were composed themselves, Thuc. 1.17.
,
,,
more

', ,
and intended for his
philosophically,
confidential disciples, A. E. a. 13.
part. perf. m. of
to have a name upon something, to be
named in consequence of.

,
upon
what account, wherefore, Herod. 4. 45.
> ,
,
like.

, .

,
, a festival, a holy day, 1. upon three, three deep, Thuc. 2. 90.
.
, ,' ,
5. 1. the passover, Mat. 26. 5.
f.

i. e.
I feast,

celebrate feasts, Plut. 2. 503.


celebrate,
'

to feast feasts, With the dative


5. 2. 6, the de-
scent was upon one, one descended atatime.
implies condition, ob-
ject, end, dependence, ?" ,
1 Cor. 5. 8, let us feast, let our passover some things are upon us, dependent upon
. ,
be that truth and moral purity of which
the literal passover is but the symbol. So

,
us, in our power, 1.6. 2.
what depends on me. Megacles made over-
Thucydides says of the Athenians, 1. 70. tures to Pisistratus, if he would have his
,
daughter, upon the su- ,
,
,
they look upon no other day as a
festival in comparison with that when they

' ',,
, ',
succeed in what they ought to engage.

the celebration of a festival.

,
preme power, upon condition of having
also the supreme power, Herod. 1. 60.
avaOnvai

,
, festivity, to dedicate a piece of land to Apollo upon
being completely uncultivated, on condi-
,-
,- , '
festive, joyous. tion of. upon injuring, with a
, — gen. lijoc, for fr. ,
view to injure, Herod. 1. 41.
his own, her own, their own. When a per
son of rank was accosted, to avoid the free
dom of a direct address,
used to signify thy.
or ,
was then
],
, of her own
you have
an
Plat. Protag. p. 90, each of these
learnt, not upon practising it as
but upon knowing it as a liberal
art,
son, meaning thy son, a. 393. Hence the study, e. not for practice but for liberal

,
II.

-
i.

analogy by which ille, ipse, &c. have their information,

,genitive illius, ipsius.

a prep, governing the genitive, dative


Hec. 649, upon the spear,
slaughter and desolation of our houses,

.,
— over,
,
and accusative, and means upon, on i. e. war, carnage aud desolation being the

,
,
, on the
on a bed, 9. 2. '
near, at,in, during, against, towards, for, to.

,
earth, Mat. 6.
$-
.
object or consequence,
what work, on what account,
upon
3. 14. 2.

at the door,
the river, A. 4. 3. 28.

,,
Herod. 5. 92, standing upon the door,
on, near, at
.
Herod. 4. 1 54, over his motherless daughter,

,
he married another wife, i. e. a wife that

.
was over and oppressed her.
7. 2. 1,
Samos.
7. 31,
to
61
sail

,
upon Samos, to or towards

the road bearing upon Caria, lead-


ing to Caria. upon, near
witnesses, before witnesses, E. 6. 5. 38.
olov, on the way, by, near the way,
Herod.
,
the bread, with the bread,

after,
.
3. 14. 2, to eat

6. 2. 27, to drink upon the food,

,.
drink upon taking food, drink immediately
2. 3. 7, rose up
upon him, rose up upon his sitting down,
meat on
-
— — — —
447

,
rose next to him or immediately after him.
upon these things, upon these
a verdict has been brought upon him, he

,
has been condemned, A. 7. 7. 35. --
448

conditions, in consequence, 4. 5. 38 ; 3. 2.
11. ', upon which, A. 4. 2. 12.
With the accusative supposes the atten- ,
lect,

,
shall bring to ourselves,
Thuc. 4. 64.
words exquisitely brought to
send for, col-

- use,
tion to be directed forward to an object,
still preserving thesense

, ,
upon, and thence
to, for, towards, against, and is generally
connected with a verb of motion, irfi
upon governors, before them, Mat.

, upon his age,


- ,
introduced, well selected, Long. 35.

,
Herod.

to,
attracted by,
].

Ion. for
199.
, enamoured of

I bring upon, bring

place before, Herod. 2. 2.


,
beauty,

$,
10. 18. ext TYiu the bringing to, attraction
to his age, 6. 27. ' upon a horse. induction, inference, Arist. Ethic, a. 7. in-

',
Herod. 1.
a hunt, to go a-hunting.
,
,,
37, to go upon
scil. $,
cantation, sorcery— importation, supply of
provisions, Thuc. 7. 24. —
the means of be-
at the right side, 1. 51.
time, during some time,
two days, Thuc. 2. 35.
ovo
for a
for
about
,.-, ,
stowing, the immediate cause, Pint. 6. 405.
— a thing brought upon, punishment, ad-
versity, captivity.
.

,
,
her.
them, Mat.
the
,
three hundred, Herod. 4. 198.

,
Antig. 889, what upon this
daughter, as to this daughter, in respect to

city, near, at
upon
10. 21.
or about it,
,.
their parents, against

7. 5. 1.
,
against
,
, conducive, alluring,

tive or charming,

,
2. 5. 5.
the things most attrac-
that which
attracts, attraction, allurement, Plut. 9. 82.

- ,
raised by incantation.
ov,
contend earnestly, Jude 3.

,,
,,,
, —,
.^,
a defender, M. Supp. 514.
rejoice, glory in, Apoll. 3. 470.
.
. ,
glory, exult in, 11.
am indignant at.
91.
ing, 2. 6. 11.
I sing to, enchant by sing-

allure by the use of
I tell in consequence, divulge, charms, charm, o< those who
,
, , ,, ,
Od. . —
775. announce, A. 7. 2. 19. com- were enchanted, I will chant
mand, direct,
promise, engage, Mark 14. 11.
. 3. 1. 6.

— hold out, .,
to you, ring in your ears, Luc. 1. 337. aor.
they sang at, sang to, Call. 4. 2 52.
-
,
profess, Luc. 1. 25. A. 2. 1. 4.
— , , I lift up, place upon, aor. 1 .

,
y, a II. 37. 426. — extol, Olym. impel.
9. 31.
declaration
—a
made on account of
something, I
,
increase, bring to an end by caus-

,
a promise thing promised, a blessing, ii]'' to increase, : Od. £. 65.

- -,
Luke 24. 49. 2 Pet 1. 4. —
elocution, Pint. for t^yc God prospers the work.

,, ,, ,
,
,,
,
,
6. 163.

illustrious,
inf.
gather together,
Od. .
raising of
f. ,
signalize,
Att.
f.
II.

ni.
a. 126.
631, collected themselves.
an army, Herod.

that he will pride him-


I
-,
7. 20.
render

,
-,, , . ,
143.
o. 293.

the reward of victory, prize.
ov,
collect round, Luke 11. 29.

,
I lament over, Bion. I. 6.
situated on the shore.
I blow vehemently upon, II.
rush forward with impetuosity, Od.
a storm.
.

,self,

—bring
exult,

watch over
f.
11. a.

,
I

into a snare, decoy,


133.
keep awake on account
my 'property,
aor. 2. ,,
an object, conduct, draw, lead to the enemy
3. 3. 6.
bring ruin upon, hasten, 2 Pet. 2. 1. bring
Luc.

.
2. 74 9.
1 bring to
of,

, /, ,
am ashamed,blush, Iph. A. 900.

approbation eulogy,

in darkness, or

,
ov, 6, praise,
— 1. 1.

\, ov, deserving of praise, laudable,


commendation

dread Proserpine, as residing


may be for
praiseworthy, on the same principle that

,

,
upon a man the charge of guilt, impute,
Acts 5. 28. bring to harbour, import.

,
%-
,
the furies are called
f. ,,
or
II. /. 457.
— f.


Att. ,
blow a quicker strain,
", scil.

days, Luc. 2. 30.



duce produce, I. 772.
2, 2. 22, to bring on,
hia
he brought himself
through the seventh day, he lived seven

bring forward, intro-
,
, -,
,,
- 29. —
I applaud, praise

, —
assent to, II. .
approve, Lys. 198.-- encourage, re-
ward, 0. 9. 14. congratulate, A. 5. 5. 7.
applause, praise, Troad. 418.
ov, 6, an approver, eulogist.

, ov, praise-worthy, laudable, A.


.
I bring

for myself, send for —


bring upon myself E. a. 12.— qualified to praise,
envy, incur, 52. —
bring on myself skilled in delivering eulogies, Long. 8.
— I lift, raise up —
raise a house, build,

- ,.,
praise, merit, 2. 8. 34. obtain for myself
—•bring witnesses, cite, allege, bring to use, erect —raise to distinction, render conspi-
apply, 0. 17. 15. per. pass, cuous, extol, Luc. 3. 259. —
raise a person
— — a

449
to a thing
1. 13. , desired,
I
self— I pride, exult, am elated, Ar. 1. 2.
25. —
.
prompt, instigate, A.
am

raise myself against another, am irri-


raised up, raise

,
6.
my-
himself on the pinnacle of blood, i. e, car-
ried the effusion of blood to the highest

/,,,
pitch of impiety, Choeph. 930.
450

,,
tated against, 3. 5. 4. hoist the sails, —
that which raises itself against,
,
on the shore, Apoll. 2. 178.
or , ,
, brought to, foreign,
brought to by a reward, hired, Trach. 259.

-,
opposes, 2 Cor. 10. 5. aor. 1. pass, — brought to by force, violent, Pyth. 6. 10.

,

-,
he was taken up, Acts 1. 9. superinduced, acquired by discipline, and

,
-,
,
64.

-,
perceive, am sensible of,
Ajax, 553. am perceived, Dem. 24. 5.
I rush forward, pounce upon
blow furiously upon,

about to rush upon the prize, i. e. seize.


move
II. . 145. — chase, -.
themselves, 628.
^.773, they were
not instinctive, Herod. 7. 102.

-,
I
I shout at, shout in conse-
quence of others shouting, A. 1. 8. 12.
aor.
wander, rove abroad, Od. o. 400.
1.

I take pity upon, commiserate


-/, sub. ,
,
a person for being ill treated, or I feel in-
am ashamed, I blush at, (Ed.
-,
dignant at his treatment, Od. a. 252.

,
ill

T. 647. —abandon through shame, Mark

, -,
I put ointment upon, aor. 1. m.
8. 38. —
feel shame in the presence of a su- imper. do thou anoint,

-, . 47. —instigate^ Polyb.

, .
perior, reverence, E. 4. Od.

,,
1. 15. 2. 51. 2.
wo, I ask for, beg, (Ed. C. 1428.
f. succour, II.
I .
428.— ward off'
— ask over and above, she re- the evil day, II. v. 315. fr.

-, , ,
quests these things for herself, S.Elect. 1 130.
blameable, II. a. 335.
grind upon, Apoll. 1077.

-,
I realise, Luc. 2. 306. verify,

Herod.
-',
1.
I accuse, criminate.
/Ms/^oz/aissriimiy^syocurgingheavier charges,
26. ,
,confirm, Thuc. 4. 85.

22,
I wrap, roll in. plup. pass,
were enveloped, Apoll. 4. 1468.
-

,
— I listen to, comprehend, Ajax, 1 280. ,
fortified, strong, Choeph. 412.

,
-,
Herod.
listening to, (used adjeetively in
3. 29.)
, 6,
capable of feeling.
, notorious, Herod. 2. 119.
hover upon, threaten to at-
.
against,
f.

after another, pile one on another


,
I change one thing
dash
3. 3.— vary my course, said of
a hare turning in various ways to elude the

^, 172.— fluctuate, am

,
tack, Pint. 2. unstable, dogs, K. 5. 20. said
imp. he hung upon, harassed, of two persons drawing a rope at each end

-, ,,
3. 738.

f.
grown
I
to
grow
full vigour, mature.
ripe upon, as the
so as to form a ?ing, and thus inclose two
combatants, II. v. 359. alternately straining
— I alter my meaning, said of a ivord which,
vine ripens by leaning on another tree;
thence metaphorically said of an inferior
genius fostered into vigour and maturity
being equivocal may be ivrested to support
two opposite senses, 3. 8. 1. .
Socrates
did not form his discourses with logical

,
by the mellowed influence of a superior subtlety so as to avoid ambiguity, but used

-, ,
mind, Long. § 13. draw to a crisis, be-
come more

— follow the
f.

inveterate, Luc. 2.
J
1

follow close upon or


74.
words in their general import to be defined
by circumstances of a practical nature.
adv. close one to the other, said

,,
behind in steps, trace, imitate, of a horse ivhose breast should be broad, that
1 Pet. 21. — follow
2. after, pursue study — his legs in moving should not pass too closely,
— follow on an enemy, infest, press
closely . 1. 7.

~/,, , %
,, ,»
upon, E. 4. 3. 2.— follow up the truth, en-
force, accompany, Mark 16. 28.
— ,
parties
a contract in which both
exchange pledges of friendship—
marriage-contract, Herod. 1. 74.

-
to
, concomitance. by ,
jj, distortion
— a mutual grasp,

-, .
, , -.,
consequence, as an effect, Pint. JO. 214. alternate knots, Pint. 531. Polyb. 13. 1. 11.
listen to, — obey, He-
,, one upon another,

,
7. I. .9.

rod. 4. 141, the sense of — I hear repeated impulses, Long. 20.


,
^, ,,
from, the sense of q, abreast-work raised on the

,
Luc. 1. 510.

-,,
, a hearer, judge, Theo. 8. 25. wall on which the besieged fought, a but-

., .

, I listen to, Acts 16.25. tress, bulwark, rampart, II. 258. Sep-

,, ,
II.

-, ^,
,
. 135.
,
y,

a piratical vessel, E. 1. 1. 7. aya.


listening to.
a guide to
,
—a huntsman,
a fishing boat,

-
tem, 30.

come, Pyth.
-Yic, ,,
8. 120. , ./.
cherished with hope, wel-

one who drove the


for S
cattle
f. 7, I place on the top.

sc. he placed '/, -,


used in threshing, a thresher,
I heap up corn after being
2 G
,
—— — — — .

451 452

-,
reaped, hoard, amass, Herod. 8. 24. Od. aor. 1. m. t<7ruv7ii>ctro, he lifted up his stick
i. 482.

,, ,
-,
it,

;,
I drive a chariot over, mark
with wheels, Antig. 257.

an invader, devourer, Choeph. 278.


6, one who
said of a fierce disease under allusion to a
bird of prey lighting on a carcase to devour
lights upon,

,
,-,,
to

-,
-,,
fall
strike, Thuc. 8. 84.
I hang over,

back, retreat, Aves, 649.


3. 3. 24.
set up a full cry, K. 4. 5.
I beat back. I

bend, point, upwards, It. 1.2.


f. '^^.,
,, .

I re-

,&, ,&, ,- -, ,
-',
I change one thing for another, sumeanarrative,revertfurtherback,A.13.2.
exchange, II. . 280.

,
I change I spend over and above, con-
place, move from one side to the other, 389. sume in addition, see Dem. 1219. 25.
or alter- f. I open my thoughts

&, -,
nate, mutual, corresponding,

7~,
more Herod. 1. 90.
fully, disclose,
, things in turn, by succession,
513. Apoll. 2. 1077.
H. Merc.
adv. by
I wait for,
remind,
Nubes, 801.
Rom. 15. 15.

,,, -,
turns, alternately, Od. . 481. I rest, glory in as a ground

-, ,, , ->,-, I wrap, cover up, of confidence, Rom. 2. 17.


heap upon, Troad. 1145. Plut. 10. 535. spring upon, Nubes, 1378.

-,, ,, succour, defend, II. . 357.


I
avenge, Asclep. 25.

-, , ,
protector, helper, avenger, Od.
f.
263.
,,
, a

I am inclined to both
sides, hesitate between two opinions or
.
Polyb. 1.
sail back, arrive with a fleet,
10.— overflow, Herod. 1.212.
28.
I throw myself upon another
asthehareupon its mate when playing,K. 5 A.
the shaking of

.-
fr.

parties, am uncertain, not to be depended


85.— am ambi- -?,
a weapon at another, Thuc. 4. 126.
, the rising up against, mu-

,,
upon, Lex. Plat. Thuc.
guous, Luc. 1. 244.
conj. for

,
8.

xv, when, after.



--,
tiny

-, ,
subversion, Antig. 533.
I turn back upon the enemy,


Eir-otvxQetiua,

,-,
I mount up in rank, am pro-

-,
face about, E. 6. 2. 11. refute

,
moted, . 2. 1. 10. mount upon. I turn myself back, Ix^. 8. 25.
protract, Herod.
I put off, f. I stretch out the neck,
91.—>.0,
1. throw over, Eccles. expose, A. 7. 4. 6.— stretch out the wings
376.~<, adv. thrown over one of an army, extend hold out hopes, pro- —

-,
-,
,
,
,
upon the other, Herod. 2. 81.

,
force up, cause to
f.

ascend, help up, Thuc. 3. 23.

<•, ,
Prom. 676.
I shout aloud, Plutus, 292.

f. I force upon, compel.


broke him in as with a curb,
i. e.
I

forced him sorely against


-,
^, ,
-'',,
mise,
nace, Luc.

count,
. 2. 1.
1.

I
10.— hold out
101. Polyb. 2. 44. 3.
I spring up, sally forth.
I lay upon.
aor. 2.
run back
Luc. 1. 696.
I bring back an ac-
they returned with an
to,
threats, me-

, ,
^, , ,
,
his will.
adv. necessarily.
except those things
sc.
which are indispensable, Acts 15. 28.
- answer, E. 2. 2. 13. impute, Dem. 829. 4.
— convey to, Polyb. 2. 28. 10. I evapo-
rate, /Yi

the footsteps of the hare evaporating by the


,— . 5. 2,

-, ,
proclaim over and above. —

,
heat of the sun, yield a smell refer to, lay

, ,, -,
,
4. 1. 1.
imp.

,
f.

,


aor. 2.
up again lead back, restore retreat,
draw back, opp. to
bring

he recalled himself, re-



^^,.
the blame upon, Nubes, 1076. rise as the sun.

Long. § 20.
q, ,
reference repetition, —
I blow or play on the flute.

,,
turned after a digression, Aw. 4. 6. 13.—
draw back to the deep,
anger, kindle, Herod. 7. 160.
Luke 5. 3. — call up
plup. /),
— -, I go back, retreat, Thuc. 4. 44.
or p. m.
I go back, revert, 2. .
-
] .

,
—re-
&',
-, -,
they returned, withdrew, E. 1. 6. 28.
store to harmony, Polyb. 33. 11. 5.

-,
-,
&^', , I repeat, Prom. 816.
«j, -reduplication.
15.
must return
will return,

excite anew, rekindle.


I
proclaim, promise, Thuc. 6. 60.
to.
Trach. 652.

, -, ,, I reinspect, examine again. or question


-(>,, I

slay, Polyb.
9. 29. 8.
19.2.
lift up against, (Ed. C. 434.
—undertake, raise war,
9.

— choose for myself, Luc. 2. 792.


again, interrogate, Herod. 1. 91.

back, return
aor. 2.

I come
recapitulate, repeat, Ay. 1 1
^,
-%, ,
(', I lift
I
myself up,
overthrow, subversion.
raise up, K. 6. 23.
rise, Equit. 871.
1. Dem.
go over.
1351. 23. recur,

I
Dem.

ask upon, question again.


837. 14.—
—— — ——— —— — —

,
-,—
- , ,
453 454

-, -,
-, I
bear up, persevere, Dem. 357. 10.
come back again, return.
,
I
jj, incantation, sorcery.
super-add threats, II. a. 319.

,
I growupon as a flower I equip for, suborn, Plut. 9. 151.
or blossom, I flourish, prosper, Theo. 15. — gird myself for action, Ly-

-, ,
,/,, -,
140. Apoll. 3. 519. Alcae. Mess. 10.
broil upon, Aves, 1545.
sist. 616.— attack,
I feel
Plut. 2. 403.
am uncertain
doubt about,

,
-,,.,&. / • ,
-,
, inf.
gether by equal rights, Thuc.
, a broiled

,
fish.
equalize, bind to-
8. 57.

in, Trach. 1259. Plut. 9. 429. am in doubt
respecting, ask about, Polyb. 6. 3. 6.
I shout at, clamour for, U. . 502.
,

—, ,
a curse upon, imprecation,
,
K. 4.
f. aor.
5.— become
1. remit, relax,
I
lower in regard to price,
II. /. 456. —
v\,

execrable, Phocyl. 16.


ov, liable to a curse,

Dem.
-*\, 9.—
889. release/rom K. I imprecate, curse, Plut. 8. 323.

,
toils, 7. 1.
ov, bound by a curse, execrable.
,, aor. 2. f.


21.

, ,
,
Herod.

,
85.

-,

-,
-,
,
I

4.
rise up against, oppose,
cause an insurrection, revolt from,
166.— rise up from a
rise after another.
Mat.

seat, II.
standing
10.

.
Thuc. 2. 17,
which was held under a curse not to be in-
habited, i. e. prevented from being inhabited
by a curse.

-, -
upon, E. 1. 4. 7. I raise my- ov, dark, obscure ivords.

^,
, for plated, Herod. 1. 50.
self, rise up, Plut. ov,

-,
539.

-,
-,
, &,
,
,
,
rise up, conspire against,

,
--,—
<,
, y, the
for

way
Herod.
back, return.
set right again, rectify, Air. 2.
3. 61.

>-
they

for
,
I
I water, imbue.
bring succour to.

an
II.

assistant, Apoll. 1. 1039.


a. 408.

,
4. 6. reestablish, Thuc. 7. 77.— a, ov, left-handed, awkward at
reparation, satisfaction, A. E. a thing, unlucky, Plut. 6. 121.
€. 8.

-, correction, amend- , adv. left-handedly, awkwardly.

,
,
,

,
ment, 2 Tim. 3. 16. repairing of a loss

,,
gain instruction, Polyb. 1. 35.

-,
-^, ,
, f.

or evrsvrotuva, f.
out upon, extend, Od.
ov, capable of correcting.

.
,
spring upon, II. r. 396.
I stretch
—avert,

cour, relief,
give sufficient aid, PJut. 6. 448. I
supply abundantly,
II. .

873.

Hecub. 758.
1 Tim.

,
adv.in a
5. 16. — succour
assistance, suc-
ov, suf-

,
467. ficient, Paul. Sil. 75.

, ,, ^, ,
for I rise up, Mu- manner sufficient, adequately, S. Elect. 356.

. .
,
sae. 57.— I lift up, Phcen. 105. lifting upon or
,,

,
steep,

-, ,
.Thuc.
, ,
7.
bending towards, sloping,
79.
over, elevation, exaltation,
ov, on the earth, among the liv-

)
, ,
-,
/,
and,
with words, Luc.
f. I
1.
pump upon— inundate
521.
adv. or prep. (fr.
ing, yet alive,
f.

flung over, impending,


,,
Od.
I
. 488.
hang upon,
Dem.
, 332. ult.

,
iTei over, above, Mark 14. 5. f. prepare for,
I
Cor. 15. , he is above make ready — upon, Od. 3.447.

, ,
1 6. fit to, fasten
,,

, ,, ready, prompt, Od. 0. 151.


all. £i/ to/c in the books above,

,
i. e.

, , ,
in the preceding books, A. 6. 3. 9. prasfect or deputy-governor.

•<, ,,, imp.


,
places itself above «7z adversary, a prefecture, province.
overpowers, Long. § 1.— from f. I govern, rule

above above, before, 6 over, . 1. 1. 4. I begin with.

,,
Theo. Ep. 20, sc. the Od. r,. 183, having
first of those songsters who were before, begun, i. e. having poured libation from
the first of former poets. the cups. When beginning to drink, it was
ov, equal in dignity and worth usual with each man at a feast to pour out
worthy— preferable, Nem. 7. 137. Herod.

,
a little as an offering on the ground, ac-
2. 96.

,^,, -
,
adv. in a becoming man- companying this act with a short grace; he

,
ner, justly, (Ed. T. 133.
f. I deem fit, (Ed. C. 1567.
then drank up the rest, II. a. 471. oi

-, those who begin, beginners.

,,~ ,
request, S. Elect. 660.

Od. r.
ov, rolling on
Theo. 25. 249.
enroll

457.
supplications, Pyth. 4. 385.
,.
on a
an axis, voluble,

tablet, register.
, , a charm, incantation,
charms used in
^,
,
part.

-,
-,
p. m. I fit to, fasten upon,
being fitted, Od. a. 337.
had been tied, II.

, , succour, Apoll.
lish, extol,
I set off
Nem.
302.
456.
ov, 6, a supporter, Od. . 497.

ornaments, embel-
with
7. 25.
.
1.

Od. . 266. .
2 G 2
, ,
455

:/)
ov,
——

(for comp. of
one after another, in a series, crowded,
— ——

,
,,
, ,
—— — —

odious, vexatious, burden-


some, Ranae, 971. Polyb. 15. 25. 5.


456

,11.

-,
,
&

,
277. a. 383.
Er-«s-ge--xTfl, flash at, lighten, Pint. S. 348.

- play on the flute, Luc. 2. 274.


I

-
-,
-,
adv. grievously, vexatiously.
conj. for
laugh
xv, when,
Ajax, 1008.
at, deride,
I stir up, awaken, Od. 431.
after.

, , ,,
ov, 6, a fold, stall, court, shed,

,lodge, II. •. 357.


7\, belonging to a lodge,
ov, or

at the door of the lodge, or at the


court-door, Vespas, 1473.
%{&, the day in which persons appeared
sc.
, raise against, instigate, Acts 1 3. 5.
14. 2, raised the souls, kin-


dled the hatred quicken, render more
lively, Long. § 23.
she raised herself up, awoke, Theo. 24. 34.
for

, , ,,
in the court to welcome from bed the bride f. \]/a, devour, Equit. 491.

,, , ,
m.
,
,
-, ,
and bridegroom, i. e. the second day of the
marriage.

, ,
, ,
.


ov,
tent, hut, cottage, Acts 1. 20. fold.
I lodge in a hut, tarry, aor. 1.
slept on, Luc. 2. 100.

augment, Dem. 38. p. pass,


,,,
add to the growth,
pa-
a

,
or

conj.
I encourage, exhort, Cycl. 648.
I mix by pouring upon.

blockade, siege, Herod.


when,
asmuch as— otherwise, Rom.
Ion.
for
,
r» the sitting upon, a

after

for
xv,
5. 65.
— since, because,
»,
when
3. 6.


after,
soon as
as
when
in-

,
^,,
,
, , $-
is

43.
-
grown


, grow
he hath
in political strength, 43.
his power grown,

to maturity, ripen, O.
3
augmentation.

14.
7.
—if, since—
— — soon
after
since,
as

since,Il. x. 169.
inasmuch

now, indeed, II. . 475.


as
for

,,— as
Dor.
-
lrh since, indeed

%,,, , and
or
when,

, - -,,,
imp. for when, after, Theo.

,)
live upon the air, take breath, share 15. 56.
(,

^
in, experience, taste, Pyth. 3. 68. urge, II. . 85.— drive.
,, .
,
for to devour, consume, II. there is no urgency, Long. 9.


, , .

, -,
a. 302. tear, mangle, II. v. 649. I urge myself, hasten, II.
,, I breathe in, support myself enjoy, — 354. —I am urged, driven, II. g. 902.
II. x. 410. ivx aor. 2. I look upon— pity,
that all might enjoy, each might have for favour, Luke 1. 25. Acts 4. 29. visit, —

, .
himself a share in, the good fruits of their Thuc. 7. 61.— inspect, 4. 132.

,
,
-,
, ,
king; said ironically,

,
, , or
adv. to-morrow,
that he
will satiate himself, have enough, II. . 353.
see v. 733.
,
enjoyment.
sc.
-, inf.
I form an image in my mind,

am upon or over, II.


, ,
conjecture, (Ed. C. 149.
imp. or
259. . 276.
present or consequent on a thing,
. am
I

some

-, . ,
the day of to-morrow, John 1. 29. II. 6. 2. 11, there is upon it

ov, scil. yoke placed on shame, some shame accompanies it.


the neck, Pyth. 2. 172. em, .
1.2. 5, a bridge was over it, was

-,
in the very theft, in the very
fact, John 8. 4.— clearly, Dem. 378. 12. ,—
raised—am superadded, tiuyj
if some honour be upon these, if

, , ,,, , ,
these be held in some honour, Ho. 2. 7.
rejoice at, glory in, S. Elect. 65.
-', -', I shout at, encourage by p. m. or plup.

shouting shriek, announce aloud, Theo. I go upon— go, march against— go

-,
23. 44. Call. 2. 102. to I will attack, II. . 367.

, ,
visit,
— come .
, , feel, handle, touch, Od. -. 359. upon, 2. 4. 17.

,
grope, Luc. 3. 314.— pat, Mosch. 2. 50. happen, befall, II. x. 29. go over, traverse,
,
touch, patting, M. Supp. 18. A. 1.6. 2. 3. plur. plup. for $-

-,,
impulse, Plut. 6. 556. rebuke, 6. 168.

,
they went one upon the other,

-,
.
inf. send, hurl upon, crowded, Od. 232.. rush upon, assail,

,,,
the man who

,
4. 1. 2. dispatch against. II. o. 164. p. 477.

-,
I am parched,
I expired, Ranae, 1121.
I foam at, Mosch. 5.
.
comes to me with a cup, the cup-bearer,
II. . 546.

the subsequent time, tyiv


the time coming on,
,
^,
c. lovely, charming, the following day. The present of this, as

, , ,.
-
1. 35.
<,,that which is grace- being a verb of motion, has the sense of the
.
ful, grace,beauty
principle of beauty, Venus.

water upon, Od. r.


aor. 1.
386. ,
\, q,

I
the

pour
future,
comes
it
(for will
occurs to me.
II.

come) upon

me, it occurred to me, to say.


,
29, old age
her.
it came to
pot,
— — — —

, ,
.

457 4
, .. inf.
, to clothe myself,
. signifies succession
supposes
or addition, and often

-
put on, Herod. 4. 64. see going before it) then, after

-,
-,
,
-, ,
sult,
,. , \

, ,-
Herod.

vj,

I say further,

I.
haste, urgency,

adding the

19;
Plut. 2.

f.

4. 161.
448.— add.
common saying.
I ask, con-
that, in consequence,
moreover,
is

to be
cases
asked, as in
1 Cor. 15.
Od. a. 60,
II.

6.
a. 35.
When

answered in the affirmative, and in siich


means then, that being the case. When
—besides,
a question
supposes it

,
, ^,
draw upon or over, Herod. 4. 8.
I ask, question, consult— ssri/-
joined with a noun, the participle
derstood,

,
sc.
is un-
for

,
3. plur. imp. Ion. for they the time after that, for the future,
,
2, ,
asked, consulted, Herod. 9. 93.
,
question, interrogation.
sc. to those after that, to those in
futurity, to future ages, Theo. 1. 10.

,
I bring one thing upon an- on

,,
this, then, afterwards.
other, superinduce, accumulate, have re- go, dash on
course to, Polyb. 29. 10. Long. $11.
,
, sally
,
shore, Crinag. 31.
out against, Thuc. 7. 53.

-, ,,
ocya. Ezr-syJogoyy/i, the running out against, a
,importation, introduction, Thuc.

,
sortie, 4. 35.

,, ,
jj,

, , ,
Heb. 7. 9.— entrance, Thuc. 8. 92. adv. sc. on those parts, be-

,
disease, Philoct. 767.
,
an attack, paroxysm of yond, yonder. 0/
live on the further side, A.
those
5. 4. 2. -
who

brought in, introduced, Po- things further on, objects more re-
-
,
lyb. 4. 20. 10. adventitious, extrinsic, Arist. mote, Luc. 2. 135. for
Ethic. —
L 9. borrowed, assumed foreign, — sc. on the furthest side, oppo-

-, —
,
not native, Ion. 590. site, Hipp. 1199. afterwards, Mich. 4. 5.
-.^',
- I put in upon, E. Elect. 499. run out against, Thuc. 4. 34.
,
,
-., , advance into, E. 1. 1. 4.

-, ,,
sailing out against, Thuc.

-, ,
3. plur. they attack, K. 8. 20.
10. 9. go into, enter, Long. § 44. I stretch out to, extend, Arist.
I go in, enter


am imported,
Thuc. 2. 38. come upon, surprise, 1 Mace.
16. 16. ro'J

, -),
-,
)
Ethic, a.
myself— strive,
7.

Phil. 3.
aor. 2.
] 4.
I stretch,

I
exert,

run out

,
they say that Mercury is arrived, a pro- against, sally forth, E. 6. 2. 10.
verb to express the general silence which (see I drive upon, assail,
obtains in a company when a man ot com- Plut. 2. 466, 752.— I drive a wedge —

,
manding talents has just entered, Plut.
I call in, summon, invite,
pass. inf. etfeiaickinQwdci, rather -,,, /,
',,
8. 3.
aor.
spread upon, cover with,
for
plate over it, U. . 421.
they spread a breast-

,, ,
1.

to be brought in on wheels, to be driving at, inroad, Luc. 3. 273.


rolled in, Luc. 3. 55. from I raise one's hopes, encourage,
I roll in so as to heap one Luc. 1. 345. opp. to \),
I discourage

,
-,,
upon another,

as a stranger, Luc. 3. 171.

-;, ,,
I
pile up,
come in

entrance, (Ed. C. 761. oBo.c


aj,

adventitious, foreign, by way


of addition, Plut. 8. 686.
Long. 1 1

to a feast, intrude

*, , , ,'
— amuse with vain hopes, Thuc. 8. 1.

-.,, — I cherish the hope, U. a. 545.


I go, mount upon, go on board,

2. perf. part. m.

,, ,
/;,
Luc. 2. 103. trample upon, Polyb. 20. 7.
having passed,
II. /. 578.— I go on shore, land.

, -,
a narrative collaterally introduced, so as , one who mounts, a mariner,
to diversity the main subject, digression, a driver, Eur. Supp. 585.
episode, Long. 9. 12. sport offortune, Po- I put a lid upon hold forth —
-,
-, , , ,
lyb. 2. 35. 5/ in a discourse, exhibit, (Ed. C. 476. put —
I rush in upon, Luc. 3. 323. in over and above measure, Luc. 1. 175.

-), he burst in, Plut. 805.


Spring upon, II. 3. 3. 28.
aor. 2. I fall in
add greater speed or force, K. 10. II.— add
its stream, join, E. 4. 2. 6.

I fall upon, Theo. 22. 124. /



-; -,
upon, attack an enemy burst through a

-,
gate, rush in, Luc. 3. 425. (Ed. C. 970. Ajax, 42.
he makes this assault,

-, ,
I sail to, pass by sea, Thuc. 6. superadd, Agam. 1395.

,
I


), ,
2. come up with a fleet, E. 1. 1. 3.
f. I flow in upon, spread to.
make
a sound in correspon-
dence with, or in consequence of another,

,Thesm. 1174.
conj.
bring

.
upon, Hercul. F. 1267.
set
(ivt and This particle
in, introduce,
-,,
shcut in approbation, II. 42.
I put on an additional gar-
ment, aor. 1. in. to put on a
.
— —
459

- , -, , 460

-, ,
,
^,, —, , ,
celestial clothing,
body, 2 Cor.

-, ,
coat or cloak, opp. to

-,
garment, John 21. 7. Plut.
5. 4.
i. e. assume an immortal

4. 79.
an upper
an under
-j/oc,
cover over.
have crowned a temple,

A. 3. 1. 5.— explore, Herod.
a suffrage, Dem. 594. 26.
I
vyiov

question
1. 67.
II.


for
a, 39.
— consult,
solicit

. aor. 1. I have laid hands aor. 2. p. m.

, ,, ,
upon, II. . 261. touched I bring accusa- — I come upon or against an enemy, Luke 11.
— —
-, ,
tion upon, Herod. 1. 68. see 22. happen to come up to, occur
befall,
-?6)», jump up, Trach. 934. spring, to my mind, Ax. 4. 3. 3. reach a country, —
rush upon, (Ed. T. 477. Antip. Sid. 27. traverse, A. 7. 8. 14. — advance, at-
I stretch upon, strain, Ephes. in the ages
2. 7,
Od. . 465. having extended coming upon us, future ages — come upon
himself, with extended or uplifted arm, so as to aid, or to support, Acts — over- 1. 8.

— suggest,
-, ,
Antig. 1249. \oyov, that the run, survey, Luc. 2. 479. Equit.

,
-^, ,
report prevailed, Theo. Char. 6.

-, ,
I enjoin further, Antig. 224.
615. aor. 2. part, for
ing come upon, surprised, Theo. 4. 60.
hav-

-,
,,
,
^, ,
harness, II. . 374.
put on the harness, I

arm against, Ajax, 451.
prepare for myself, Od.

,
89. . /.
draw to, close, Od. a. 441.

14.
ask further or too consult,
thou questionest, He-

,
I bring out against, send out a rod. 1. 30. imp. for
detachment, Thuc. 5. 71.— draw out, ex- they asked— a thing re-

-,, ,
tend, quired, stipulation, answer, Pet. 3. 21.
7. 52, extending his line of battle ships in , a question, Thuc. 4. H8.
1

sailing
i}> -, towards the land
stretching
105.
out, extension,
,, E7T£ff€i*^iy,Iadvanceintoorupon,Thuc.4.14.
Thuc. 8. ov, o, one who flings reproaches
at another, an insolent babbler, II. /3. 275.

sin at or upon, offend in assail with reproaches, Lye. 130.


,

,
addition, it is necessary to a reproach— frivolous talk,

-,.,
ij,

-,
plup.
-, ,
, , -, .. ^,,
commit further error,

I march out against, en-


counter, Thuc. 1. 84. sally out upon.


,.. ^,
Dem. 595. 10. babbling,

3. 14. 3.
Od. . 159. ao. 456.
I eat one thing upon another, At.

eat, live upon, Call. Ep. 26.


Ion. for I attend

,.,
I drive out against, E. 5. 8. 6. upon, comply with, Herod. 7. 10.
march out , who come

,
aor. 2. those after us,
— turn out of the right
against, A. 5. 2. 6.
road, E. 7.
follow up

2. 4. proceed through,
pass,
to the end, Luc. 662. — 2. finish ,
posterity,
ov,

ov,
Theo. part of
1 2.
annual, perennial,
one who follows
1 1

^,
. f.

.
a law-suit, thoroughly investigate— run out another, an attendant, Pyth. 51. Apoll. 3.
to such extent of insolence, Antig. 763.

-,, -,
664.

follow up a crime, punish, Plut. 2. 130.

-,
-,
I direct to an object balance

,
^,
I effect, perpetrate an ad- or keep straight, K. 5. 32.
ditional crime, Dem. 274. 18. aor. 1. m.
thou hast dispatched the al-
-, render famous, al•. 211.
guard myself well against.

,
ready lost, thou visitest me with double

-,
death, Antig. 1 298. —
I welcome, applaud, II. a. 22.
shout at with joy, Iphig. A. 1468.

,
-,
,,
.
,,
shout out joyfully, proclaim
with Bacchanalian fury, Septem, 637.
,
,,.
muster, review,
vows paid after a success-
ful expedition, A. 6. 5. 2.

-,
II. .
ceived,
I pray after or in consequence,
II. /3. 411.— I glory, exult on account of,

431. address the gods for things re-

wished, vow, Theo. Char. 15.



thank- address them for things

,
-,
,
-,
, perf. m. of

, .. ,
Ion. for
to reach, Herod.
, ,
ally, it is fit, II. a. 126.

, ov,
lined imperson-

follow up, strive


7. 8. or
lovely, Luc. 3. 594.
I
ov, to be wished or longed for.

f.
I lower the price, bid or sell at
a low price, Plut. 9. 294. Dem. 687. 24.

hold on or against— hold
f. I
aor. 2. — —
,^.,— .
,
exert,
ing,^. 97.
upon,
>j. , ,
free cultivation,
I
269.
I work upon,
,
cultivate.
the working on land, a
3. 2. 11.
press upon, thrust, II. . 859.
lean upon, support by lean-
I support myself, lean
inclining upon, .
225.
on the time, prolong, Acts 19. 22. sus-



pend, desist lay hold on, hinder, repress,
E. 6. 5. 14.— possess, occupy, Herod. 1.
164.— hold forth, exhibit, Phil. 2. 16. imp.
he fastened himself upon, he at-
tended or applied himself to, Herod. 9. 59.
observe, Luke 14. 7. take heed, I Tim. —
— — — — —

,
46)
4. 16. — fix my hope upon, depend on, He- , I sound, ring at
I

— re-echo,
402
Iphig.
rod.

-,
I. 80.— hold,
restrain myself,
direct against, II. s.

keep myself back,


240.
,
-, —,

A. 1584. I rustle, Anacr. 172.
prep. upon, see column 445.
,
,.
Polyb. 130. 17. 17. f. aor. 1. I send,
, 6, , one who hits the mark, bring upon dispatch, Od. o. 474.— lay

-,,,
successful, Arist. Ethic. a.
of,

.
Herod, 8. ill.
planks which covering
at,
^. 10.
— possessed
-,
hands upon, . 288. bring on, occasion, Od.
.

,
49.
imp. I please, prove

-,
the hollow part of a ship form the deck, pleasing, Od. v. 16. II. «. 407.
,
-, ,
,
Od. s. 253. spend the night, lodge upon,

.,.
I sleep,

,
speak against,
/, laying this to his charge, Herod. 1. 90.
,
Od. o. Archias, 10.
ult.
shout, shriek at, II. v. 832.
, ,,
,
the days imme-

& ,,
ov, perennial, Od. . 89.— abun- diately after the feast, in which the com-

, , . ,,
dant, 3, 233. mon people were allowed to eat the rem-
— —
, ov, one who heard, a witness
to hear, audible, A. 2. 5. 11.
the most elevated spot,
^-
put a thing against
fit nant of the festival fruit, wages,

^iKac
' Pyth. 4. 248, the minds of men are

,, ,
I

the light, shade, Pint. 10. 46.— disguise, prone to prefer crafty gain before justice,

,
Thuc.

,,- , 6. 36. fr.

-, , ()•/{, , ,
reigner, Polyb. 2. 55. 9.
6, , shaded,
,,
light.
dark, Cycl. 676.
a stranger, fo-
yet they come to a bitter remnant when
the unjust riot in festivities, the remnant
of their feast is sorrow.
on throw, fix upon,
I put, clap —

, ^,
sc.

,,
foreigners, opp. to
tives, Herod. 8. 73.
a stranger, sojourner,
6,

,
11. 4.
,
,
.
na-
lay —

impose, A. 3. 5. 6. put my hands upon,
put a patch upon, sew, Mark 9. 16.
put one after another, succeed, Pclyb. 6.

, . ,,
advent, occur- 39. 4. dash against, proceed to, reach,
rence, the attack of sorcery, H. Merc. 37. Polyb. 2. 14. 17.— belong to, suit, 18. 24.
•-/, , , daily, Apoll. 3. 893. — —
put a snare, lay, set put ivonnds upon,
inflict, he caused stripes to be

-,
,
alternate, said of two bars one
dosing on the other, double, \\.. 456.— al-

,
ternately worn garments, Od. f. 513.
cause to bend, II. . 148. where
inflicted, A. 2. 9.— strike, dash against,
Mark
came
,
4. 38.
their lot,
that which
Herod.
falls
it befell

2. 180.

,-
them,

to one's lot, his por-


it be-

,, , , Luke

,, Mark

,
joins to and is therefore tion, 15. 12.

,
transitive. 14. 72, having set his mind on this, having

-,
-,
for
ov,
or when, after.
hanging in the air, aloft,
ov, to be desired, lovely,
. reflected on this, he wept,
having their arrows laid on their strings,
i. e. being ready to use their bows, A. 4. 3.

-, , . 1, )
delightful, II. . 512.— beautiful, splendid, 21. I put myself upon a thing,
enviable, Pyth. 5. 98. attempt, Polyb. 46. 3.

lumniate,

,, ,

or malice, opp. to
I curse, Mat. 5. 44.
f.

and insolence, 2. 5. 6. oppose from envy


ca-
Pet. 3. 16.— treat with scorn

At. 3. 5. 16. ,,
— (see I go upon, mount,


embark, ascend go into a country, tread
on, invade, .
5. 2. 12. aor. 1. I ,-
,
caused to ascend, raised.

-,
fr. or for agy, a curse. ,, raise to glory, render celebrated, II.

,
, imprecation, S. 285. they went on,
Thuc. 1.26, an insolent manner detri-
in — advanced in this science, Luc. 2. 364.— go

-, , -
ment proceeding from malice, Luc. 1. 724.

-,
I live in solitude, remain quiet.


at the oar, Od. . 403.
nished with oars, . 559.
, , roofed over, (^) over-
fur-
. ,
, ,
up to a station of eminence, occupy, ap-
propriate, Dem. 278. 21. he
trod, covered with his foot, Plut. 6. 234.
, passage-money, fare, Od. o.
^,

,
448. a tax paid for admis-

,
arched, Od.


,
349. over-shaded,
— high, projecting
shading, Theo. 25. 208.
,
prudent, Plut. 6. 09.

-';,
•/\, ,,
v. 1121.
. 132. — over-
6, a fluent speaker, Od. v. 332.

oratory, Apoll. 3. 1006.


defence or protection, Od. 306.
rocks,

ov, three-fold, crowded, II. cr. 211.


.
— , , , ,
1.

, , ,, —- ,
sion into a country, Plut. 8. 903.


,,
a ladder, steps, ascent.

inf.
trample upon, crush, U.

bont, a transport-
ascent

fem. adj.

rising of the tide, Plut. 8. 283.
assault,

sc.
.
for
234.
Herod.

,
6.

a passage-
61.

to
— — — a

,
463

,
), , one who mounts, Od.
manner, a marine, E. 1. I. 19.— a rider.
I embark

Herod. 3. 63. usurp.



invade, appropriate,
. 1 30. a a thing, design, purpose, Polyb. 5. 92.
secret design against another, intrigue,

,
snare, A. 1. 1. 8.
plot, conspiracy, E. 3. 3. 4.

design against the state,
machination,

:, —
464

, ,
accessible, Herod. 4. 62.
I cause to mount, force on board,
Thuc.

who
7. 68.
,, — ;

,
, 6, one

,
Acts 23. 24. Luke 10. 34. has designs against another, insidious,

, I am too burdensome to, oppress,



2 Cor. 2. 5. £3r/€sigtJj/<y, I overload, sv-t-

&-, be imposed upon, Exod. 21. 30.


carry on, bear, Cycl. 378.
,
&, ,
crafty, opp. to
tain possession, Luc. 1. 173.
deceitful, uncer-

adv. insidiously, artfully, Plut. 2. 803.


delay, retard, Luc. 1. 110.

,
,with open violence,
I commit violence upon, act
.
3. 1. 11. opp. to
I act with secret treachery.
live over and above, survive, Plut.
-,
,
murmur, mutter, Ranae, 692.
, ,
roar, II. . 739.

pressing with great weight


upon, giving sanction to, Eum. 964.

"^,
, ,
6. 434. continue to the end, Thuc. 5. 26. f. iacj, I weigh, press heavily upon,

f. -, I commit an additional .

,
II. . 91. overwhelm, 433.— cause the
injury, I injure further, Thuc. 109. fruits to grow more heavy, ripen, Od. &>.
//, 8.

,2. 401.

, .
-,
— look upon a person
look upon

in distress, pity, Luke 9. 38.

my eyes upon, discern, Luc.


look upon
with admiration, regard, James 2. 3.— fix
525. — look
to for information, inspect, procure, Plut.
e$ȣ, looking to, turning

the eyes upon, Plut. 2. 640.


1.

,
,
343. aor. 1 .part,

she growled, Call. 4. 55.


having increased
in pomp and dignity, Pyth. 3. 190.
I roar at, imp.

I thunder at, Plut. 2. 423.


,
thunder-struck, blasted,

,
hair-brained, malignant, Ajax, 1403.

,,
Mat.
a thing put upon, a patch,
16.— a
, f.

,
I
— overspread, Theo. 22. 43.
upon as blossoms or

,, ,
9. lid. flowers do
.
(, , , a bar, bolt, II. 453.

the putting on the putting on
of a seal, impression, Luc. 1. 122. the put- —
ears —
f. I

stuff with, Plutus, 379.


having my ears stopped up.
stop up the mouth or the

ting on of colours, inlaying, painting the — ou, placed on the altar, Eur.
putting on of a garment, additional weight, Elect. 7 1 5. ,
a sacrifice, Theo.
incumbrance, Thuc. 2. 49.— the putting on 6. 26. — %&.», place before
-, .
1

ofbncks, a pile, range, 3. 20.— the putting the altar, expose in public, Heracl. 42.

02,
on of iron grapplers, 7. 42. the putting
on of a penalty, impost, fine, Dem. 572. 19.
call upon, Theo.
, one who has reached
the
12. 35.


, ,,
the putting the mind on an object, the

,
human grasp, Long. § 35. design, under-

-,
,
taking, Polyb. 2. 11.2.

age of marriage, marriageable, Herod. 1.
196. I marry again, add one
husband to another, Orest. 588. -
,
,
,
, I shout at or cry over a sad event,
Persae, 1059.

, ,,

bark at. she calls
aloud upon, Med. 168. proclaim,Thuc.7.69.
exclamation, shouting.
, acclamation, shouting at.
marriage,
a woman a second time married,
a step-mother, Plut. 10. 765.
,
, a second marriage, inter-
. 3. 2.
marry one already allied by
I
1 1. Dem. 256. 6.

,
or eiptQaroc, one shouted at, marriage, marry by right of consanguinity,

&,
},
, ,
celebrated, Anacr. 88.

,
,.
, ,
Er/-€oj50£6>,reinforce, succour, Herod. 7.207.

,
,
, reinforcement, auxiliary.
make a rattling noise, rattle.
I attend on a flock.
I feed myself, Batrach. 54. Pint. 7. 850.

>7, , o^oc, 6, a shepherd, Od. v. 222.


Joseph. A. J. 14. 12. 1.— become a brother-
in-law, 3 Reg. 18. 22.

count of.
marry the wife of
a deceased brother, espouse, Mat. 22. 24.

I

pride upon, exult on ac-
elated,
I make
.
emboldened.
a noise at,
,
7\,
^,
,
, a herdsman, Od. y. 422. rumble as the bowels,Agath. 52.

,
, ,,. ,,,
a herd, fold, Theo. 25. 95. ,
on the earth, earthy, 1 Cor. 15.
I set my mind upon a thing, I 40. —
worldly, Jam. 3. 15. tern-

design, plan, A. 5. 6. 1 6. entertain sinister
designs, plot against, Herod. 8. 132. A.U. 1.
poral things, Phil.
, I
3. 19. ys?.
laugh at, smile upon,

,, ,
f.

— — deride,
, -
15. seek to obtain by artifice, Luc. 1. 654. 28. Luc. 1. 336.
scoff,
I am ensnared —
take by a —
snare, . 5. 4. 16.
— &- f. come upon, happen I
, — , mind at or in consequence come upon as ram —
, the setting the upon does, fall —
come upon as a storm, over-
— — — —— —— — ——
465
, &- 466

,
4. 19.

-, ,
take, surprise— come upon a thing sought

, ,
or aimed at, attain, reach, come up to,

-,
.
am tyorn, . 71. v$o»yi
359. ..
come up in the
6. 19.
room ofj grow, succeed, spring up, II. . 148.
plea-
sure which succeeds or is consequent upon,

. ,
, I borrow on
goods, mortgage,

loponnesus.
daurus.
a ,
I lend on interest

908. 26.
money on
interest, raise
Dem.
, city of the Argives in Pe-
the people of Epi-
adv. from Epidaurus.

,
...
., ,
3.
after, posterity.
,
those who come I feast plen-
teously, indulge in luxury and profusion,
.

,,
,
offspring, fruit, Long. § 6. supply abundantly, 2. 2. 8. Herod. 5. 20.

, , that which up springs you luxuriously

-
after

,—
. ,
,
another, an a subsequent race
after crop,
, , descendants, O. 7. 34.
expatiate, copiously illustrate, Luc. 1.452.
see Hemsterh.

,
. ,,,
,
Ex/y£j«ija, honour, promote on account
rejoice in, Prom. 156.

tongue against, divulge, threaten, Prom.927.


the, fy, the little tongue or slip
which covers the orifice of the windpipe,
and thus prevents suffocation by the food
that would otherwise enter it, Plut. 8. 789.
I use
of.

my
, more,
exhibit
strate
show

display

in

—introduce,
declare,
myself,

—proof, .
in

9.—,
want of, destitute,
need of, or deficient

it is
instruct,
become known,

,

A.
,,—
6. 6.

necessary to show, must


specimen, 2. 6.
3.

.
in.
f.

2.
%,
demon-

1.21.

,
I

,
I bend back the edge, blunt 6. 8. 2. q,
— blunt the keenness of desire, beat down, display — demonstration, knowledge, He-

,,, -,
prevail over by earnest persuasion, II. x. rod. 2. 46.

2,
569.
,
, bend a spear,

of a cloth, trim, Luc.

)
,,.
1 78.

f.
.
I clip,

observe, perceive, under-


I discover,
3.
shave off the nap
380.
(see


ostentatious, Long. 34.
eirtfeiKTiztog, ov,
parts of a discourse that are
showy, the splendid demonstrative
adv. ostentatiously, for show,
Plut. 3. 244.
— -

, ,
Mark

,
stand, Mat. 23. 7. recognise,
2. 8. I eat after, Equit. 1137. eiet-
Od. .
216. S. Elect. 1311.— mark out as , having supped, after supper.

,
objects of regard, 1 Cor. 16. 18. acknow- the last course, dessert, Luc.
ledge, Mat. 11. 27.

, , one who takes cognisance


2. 334.
ov, tenth, scil.
of,

,
a judge, Plut. 1. 531.

,,
appraiser, Dem.
978. 11. arbitrator, Luc. 3. 536.
tively, considerate, indulgent,
Tut
adjec-

Mosch. 4. 70, am indul-


, ,
, h
the tenth part, E.

,
ov, scil.

riage-bed, conjugal embrace, Hec. 926.

,
,
ov, at the right hand, on the right.
1. 7. 6.
on the bed, mar-

,
gent to you to grieve, excuse your grief. scil. places situated on
,
sag,
§
cognisance, recognition, the right or to the east, Herod. 6. 33.
..
,-
discernment, dexterous, graceful,

,
sv e>. 8.

Rom. 28, to have God in their know- adverbially, for adroitly.

,
1.

,
),
ledge,

,
him as
i.

above it, thigh,


e. to recognise and acknowledge
God, Ephes.

ihog,

ov, on the knee, Pyth.


I

,
i. 17.
discover, perceive, K. 6. 23.
pan of the knee
Od. . 225. ,,
,.
— what

,. ,
is 353.
Pyth. 6. 19, scil.

I
on the
right parts of your hand, on the right, Theo.

,,
25. 18.— on the right, auspiciously, II.

look upon,
dexterity.
visit, Od. . 16.
.

,
107. to be seen, discernible.

-
6. ov,

,
I write upon, inscribe, en- w*>, I put a knot upon,

,
^,
, ,
grave upon
scratch,

scribe

, ,
my
make
— deeply impress, Heb.
a mark upon, II. n. 187.
write my own name upon, in-
arms, E. 7. 5. 20.
8. 10.—
- I bind, tie

wounds bound up.



.
oblige,
8. 7. 3, many having

am bound up by
their

,
.

,
title

^,
,
, —,
166.
adv. with a scratch, slightly, II.

— epigram, A. E. /. 8.
inscription,
want, I— am deficient
want . 385.
— want in addition, desire more, . 229.
, a bandage.
,
in, II.

tie,

,
, ,, superscription, Luke 20. 24. or needy,
,
an assessor of taxes. whoever is poor or in want, II. . 481.

^, weep
over, Luc. 1. 655. scanty, 1. 225.

, ov, a tear, Eur. Supp. 284.


I take for my portion, admi-
nister to myself, add an oath, H. Merc. 385.
ov, allotted for a share, Call. 1. 59.
adv. a second time, Od. 161.
, I receive to myself, accept take
to my house, entertain, 3 John 10.— admit,

allow undertake labour, Long. § 22.
2
.

—— — — —

,
,
—— —

,
,,
—— ;

, &,
467 I 468
fit for receiving, capacious. I whirl, aor. 1 II. y. 378.

.

ov, remarkable, manifest, Theog. turns about, Od. v. 218.

^, ,, ,,
442.— discernible, known, Herod. 8. 97. I set right, put in order, Tit. 1 5.

, .

residing at
adv. obviously, remarkably.
ov, 6
home— one come

to reside with
the people, a stranger, sojourner, Herod.
at home,
),,
toiic,
a technical term in rhe-

Eum. 1012.
repeat,
?,
after-correction, Long. 8. 14.

a ring in the box of the

,
vj,

2. 39. adjectively, prevalent among the chariot to which the reins were suspended,

, ,
people, common, (Ed. T. 502.
11. ;. 64. hence epidemic
12. 26. 4.

domestic,
— civil

war, Polyb.
II. . 475. ov, sitting on the box,
upon the chariot, Od. o.5 1 .effeminate.B^o;/.

), examine a thing on both sides.

,
remain home, Od. I at closely pursue, A. 4. 3. 18.
. —return home — sojourn,
28. as a I live held in estimation, illustrious,

,
— —
stranger, Acts 2. 10. visit. Nem. 9. 110. expected, probable, Herod.

.
,
, , abiding at home — return —
,
expecting, apprehensive, 6. 12.

,
4. 11.

,;,
home, Au. — sojourning, Dem. 1357.
1. 17.
a Corinthian magistrate,
ov, 6, , ov, necessary for supper,

a second course, dessert.


.
,
,
,
sent to preside over a colony or tributary

, ,
, ^, -
state, a prefect, Time. 1. 54.

, ,
I cross, pass over in pursuit of

f. ,
another person, Thuc. 6. 101. E. 5. 3. 4.
I sail across, pass over
run against,
I
, admittance, reception,
handle, lay hold of, grasp.
aor. 2.
assail, II.
overrun, Od.
, , running upon, inroad, attack.
.
.
I
354. p. m.
45.
run upon,

,
a second time, E. 1. 1. 10.

,
aor. 2. f. 2. f| by one impulse,
assault, at
I burst asunder, JEquit. 698. Luc. 517.— a recurrence of mind the to

,
3.

,
I arrange anew, alter, mo- the same thought, 495. ov, 6, a

,
dify a will. Gal. 3. 15.

,) ,,
pay upon,

(see
I

f.
aor. 2.
deposit money,
§#, aor.
over and above, further inform,
m.

1. 3. 14.

I give over and above


1.
Dem.

.
I settle
896. 22.
I teach
thing that runs upon another, such as a sail,
a top rope or a cord that serves to open
or close a net, opp. to the bot-
tom cord, K. 6. 9. adjectively, liable to
be overrun — accessible, II. . 432.
run to for refuge, M. Supp. 130.

,
lay out in addition to what is received,
Dem.

-,
ing,
264. 15.

der, abandon, Acts 27. 15.


— give in

Mat. 7. 9. give up, deliver surren-
bestow upon,
impart, John 13. 26. — put one thing on
consequence of ash-



..

fers to
call by opprobrious names,

. 1. brand with infamy.
set upon, Ephes. 4. 26. II. . 413.
ov, like, II. a. 256. here re-
in the context, and signifies

,,
another, superadd, increase, improve, get
forward, ..
. 5.

,{
that Theseus was like the gods on account
of his power as a shepherd of the people,

,
, ,
increase, addition, improve- see Gen. l. 26. Ovid. Met. l. 83.
ment—an additional gift, Plut. 10. 276. ,,
c. indulgent towards
magnitude^ Long. § 1.
,
another on account of his likeness to my-

,
ov, a bestower— munificent. self, and I am like,) just as the

,, ,,
I seek verb to likeh founded in the adjective Me•,

,
over and above, search after, Mosch. 2. 28. Arist. Ethic, , 11.— gentle, meek kind
investigate, Herod. 1. 95. moderate, opp. to Titus 3. 2. E. 1.
I adjudge, decide I award an
estate, or an heiress to the person who le-
gally claimed her in marriage, Dem. 1174.

, -. , ,, 1.21.
ble,

,
meekness, moderation, Phil.
sc.
that which
it is fit, it is

adv. likely, adequately,


is

4.
equita-
equitable,
5. -
,
17. I dispute at law. fitly,

. . Vespas, 1249. sufficiently,

, , ,
7, the extremes dispute with each other very narrow, . 11. 25.
for the middle place, each claims as its
right the virtue of mediocrity—
own ?,, , clemency, 2 Cor. 10. 1.
sj,

meekness, equity, moderation.


,
, , decision in favour of a claimant, ver-
!

-dict, Dem. 1055-

her nearest relative

1. 13.

ov, liable
a law-
.suit by which a person claimed in marriage
an heiress, she being by law bound to marry
ov, 6, fit
to plead causes, an able advocate, Luc.
, ,
,
to litigation, Dem.
,
1074.
ing,
ov, giving way to another, yield-

solable, excessive sorrow,


a power that does
not yield, irresistible power, II. . 892.
unyielding sorrow, incon-
459.
works that will not give way, ir-
refragable, inextricable, Od. §. 307.
I set my hope upon, imperat.
.
.
-
— — — — — I

,
469

,,,
i. e.

JZir/svyvi)
,

or
do not expect on that account,
on account of being my wife,
of the pending year.
f. stm, or I put

, .
11.

,
a. 545.

,
,.
parts next to the sea, the coast, Thuc. 3.
91.

, ,

636.

,,
,
affairs on sea, traffic by sea, Luc, s.

near the sea, E. 3. 1. 10.


-
470

,
upon, enjoin, permit, Herod. 7. 161.— p. I warm over and above.
pass. ivrfeipM, aor.
on myself a garment,
1

I clothe myself,
.

auaihiyu, having put on a robe of


m. I
-
put receive additional warmth.
,
near, devoted
to death, Dem. 1225. 1 Cor. 4. 9.

,
impudence, empurpled
ringly impudent,
kiqu, n. 164, clad in strength,
IJ. a. 149.
in impudence,

, gla-
a'h-
honour with
,
encourage, cheer, II. . 183.
at, admire
f.

Nubes, 1146.
presents,
,,
wonder —

,
yqv Nem. 11. 21, about f. I bind by an appeal to the

, ,,
to put on earth the end of all men, about gods, conjure by all that is sacred, Thuc.
to be put in the ground, the final abode of —

,
8. 53. ascribe divine influence to, Plut. 8.

,
,,
,
all

,
men. .
p. pass,
has brass put upon
I put on.
it, is

, clothed,
291. communicate divine influence, 293.
, an appeal to
the gods, invocation, Thuc. 7. 75.
,

,,^,
cased in brass, Herod. 1. 47.

hence
live over and above, sur-
vive, Herod. 1. 120. Luc. 2. 564.
for aor. 2. ,, ,
— sweep over
.
pour out a soothing air, charm.

84.— provide
I serve, wait upon, Thuc. 8.

, for by serving, § 47.


the laying upon

,

,
I sweep over of hands, Acts 8. 18. the putting oneself

,
,
,
.
the sea as a storm, Rhesus, 440.

for
sweep
over as a bird of prey, skim, clear a city
with its ravages, Phcen. 45. Others take

ou, (from the Heb. bill?, a tor-


rent) swelling, foaming rage, 521. .

- ,,
,
on an adversary, rising against, A. 4. 4. 14.
— onset,
, an imposer of
a charmer, impostor, Luc.
a cover, lid, II. .
put upon, imposed ,
cabalistic
3. 655.
228.
names,

,
ou,
adv. furiously, II. /. 512. a name, epithet.
.
,,
, I put a yoke upon, join the

-, ou, prompt to attack, 3. 1,6.

, ,
opposite banks of a river as with a yoke.


3.

,,
constructed, Luc. 2. 136.
f. , I gird, brace,
bind upon, join across, line, Polyb. 1. 75.4.
,
to the west,
on the west side, Olym. 11. 14.
western,


Theo. 22.
,
,
,,
I run upon, assail, K. 10. 10.
contemplate, Plut. 5. 2.

f.
reach, Plut. 8. 475.
•, I oppress, compress.
render turbid,
my pupils have been darkened.
— ,,
-
I boil over wax hot, rage

,
,
aor. 2. I jump
f.

as a fever, Luc. 2. 173. see Trach. 850. upon, insult, II. . 177.— board a ship —
boil like lava out of the ground so as to spring up, bound, II. e. 772.

,
[,
[,
involve in ruin, Hec. 583.

, I hasten, urge, Med. 1406.

, , ,,,
,. , ,
ou, to be admired, illustrious. f. ,, I raise a tumult, loudly

,
fine
fine,
,,
E.
ou,
1 am smitten with jealousy.

hurtful, injurious, opp. to

5. 2. 14.
1.

f.
2.
),
57.
I put a fine upon,
, a
applaud or murmur, E.
I
^,
mourn

f. ,
2. 3. 19.
over, Plut. 6. 469.
lamentation, Plut. 8. 420.
render effeminate, Plut. 5. 282.
I set my mind upon,

,
f. seek over and above, ask
wo>, I long covet, lust after, Mat. 5. 28.
for,
in addition, ot/t are not re- cherish desire in opposition, Gal. 5. 1 7.
. —

,, ,,
quired, 1 2. 4. . desire earnestly, Acts with desire I have de-
13. 7.
, —
seek justice, demand want a per-
son, send for, summon, 8. 1. 6. seek .


sired, I have greatly desired, Luke 22. 15.
an object of desire.
,
after a hare, hunt, trace so as to catch.
ou, sought for as being mirer, Cor. 10. 6.
1 1. 2. 60.

,
.
6, a person fond of, an ad-

,
,
loved, desirable, agreeeble. fond war, Call. 3. 237.

, ,
qplu


,
bringing things gratifying, 11. a. 572.

, ,,. , , Od. 375, for ijf&tu


they bring, show, favours to us
soothing, refreshing, r. 343.
ou, of marriage.
epithalamium, a nuptial song,
or
to the sea, maritime,
.

ou, adjacent
the
-'
an
energies,
part;
ful part ; ro
ou, disposed to desire or con-

sisting of desire. According to Plato, the


human soul consisted of three parts or
anger, or the irascible

tional part, A. E. a. 13.


ou,
,,
desire, or the lust-
reason, or the ra-

desired, coveted,
2 2
^
,
471

,,, ,

, the recurrence to the mind


of predominant desires, Arist. Ethic, y. 10.
. —

other so as to form a semicircle, A. 1. 8.


17.— I bend to my purpose.
472


,
-, ) , ,
desire. ,
, ,
desire —
desire offood, hunger
desire oftvomen, lust, James 1. 15. de-
sire of money, covctousness— the object of
1 John

2.
, ,
bending inward, Luc. 2.
745. the phalanx was said to be
when it resembled a half moon.
,
a bending inward, 7. 1. 4. .
.

,
16, the desire of the eyes, those objects for ssw xxg, headlong, II. 392,

, ,
i. e.

,
which by means of the eyes excite desire. ov, presiding over the fruits,
Ion. — rushI scil. Jupiter, — , ,
. — thrust forward, Dem.

,
upon, assail, Od.
297. tithes or tributes, revenue, 829. 7.

,
, ,
direct, Apoll. 3. 1324. transverse, the

^,
ov,
f. I sacrificeone upon an- oblique sides, Herod. 4. 101.

,
other, I sacrifice to revenge, slay, pour li- go down to, descend to.

, ,
bation upon, Orest. 56 1 let down, drop the ears <is

, burn, offer incense, Plut. 6. 648. a dog when running, K. 4. 3.

,
incense, CEd. T. 932. arrive in port, Thuc. 3. 49.
I put on a breast-plate, I sleep upon, Thuc. 3. 133.

, . .
, ,
),
clothe myself in mail, 3. 3. 14. shut up, 4. 1. 8.

,
I arm myself against. descend upon, Plut. 3. 771.

-, , ,
, ,
f. bawl at, urge, Prom. 73. I overflow, Hercd. 1. 107.

., or skilful in, an
.
I catch, overtake, sur-

,
experienced judge, Od. 26. prise, E. Polyb. 1. 66.
2. 4. 4.

-,
,
sleep, repose upon, Luc. 3. inf. to remain

,
.

,
102. over and above the usual time, 1.2. 11.
appoint a successor. aor. 2. 1 fall

,
I cause to sit upon, place upon, down upon, throw myself upon another,

, —
my

,, ,,,
Mat. 21. 7. lay a siege to, Polyb. 4. 61. 6.

,
sit

,,
upon, Od.

cluding g instead of )
/.

upon bear down by


I rest
own weight, Plut. 185.—
optat.
103.

I rest

upon, Ranae, 1078. I ride, 4 Reg. 16. 2.

(by ex-
Luc. 2. 884.

municated, John

precipitate, A. 4. 7. 9.
ov,

I
cursed, execrable,
7. 49. Gal. 3. 10.
throw myself down upon,

I slay
I cut, dig
excom-

upon, Plut. 9. 93.


down a passage

,
I new model, change, Eum. 690.
ov, near the heart, to the pur-
beyond the proper limits,
I tell
Dem. 977. 7.
an additional lie.

, , .,
pose, essential— seasonable, suitable, O. 5. aKha he

,
.
4.

,
cipal men, the nobles,

.
the most curious or
exquisite parts, 15. 11. oi the prin-
3. 3. 8. fr.
ov, seasonable, opportune, suit-
.
said many other

Thuc.
things falsifying them in
addition, he added many other falsehoods,
8. 74.
descending upon, Thuc. 2. 49.

,.
able, in the most vital seared, Herod. 7. 71.
part, . 12. 7. but this perhaps should be
ov,
I lie —
upon, John 11. 38. press

), —

,
upon, Luke 5. 1. press upon an enemy,
— fellow closely— overtake,

,,
burn, offer on an altar Acts 27.

,
f. I surprise,
set on fire, Long. 44. —
scorch, Polyb. 39. SO.— urge, Luke 23. 23. —
insist, near, lie
2. 7. sear, Dem. 795. 26. am adjacent to, annexed, Od. . 19.

, ,,,
2. 1 18.

glean, Luc. 2. 524.
I give an additional name, sur-
name call to, send for— summon, lay to
one's charge, reprove, E. 1. 1. 19. Herod.
assume the name of,
call myself, Heb. 11. 16. am surnamed,
Heb.

aor.
394.
1.
things continuing to the pre-
sent time, things which subsist till now,
9. 10.
I crop off the top, nip off theflower,
destroyed, ravaged, II. .
Mat.
3.

,,
23.
10.
—appeal
3.— call
to myself, invoke, E. 2.
Acts 25. 11. assume
to,
the name of a master, profess to be his dis-

shout
instigate,
at,applaud, II. 542.
urge on by pressing on
.
.

,
those before, K. 6. 20.

,,
3. 3. 19.
ciple, Acts 22. 16. I drive to, arrive at, Od. /. 148.
, I throw a veil over, conceal I mix by pouring upon

,,,, — prepare by mixing, Od. . 164. I pour, —


-
throw a veil over the faults of others so as
to overlook them, efface, forgive, Rom. 4. 7. cast one metal with another, p. pass,
pretext,Pet. 2. 16.
1 Od. . 616, the
I bend towards, turn inward lips, i. e. the brim^ were mixed over, gilded,
— move the wings of an army towards each with gold— I mix,
, *,
473
,
, . ,,
,
prepare. ,
, , .
— — — —

the goblet is
— — —

overreaching, II.
ov,
cunningly expert, Od.
281.
.

.
——
474

,
mixed or filled, Herod. 1.51. 397.
, gained over and above, overflow, inundate,

,,
,, , profit, Herod. 4. 152.

f.
f. gain over and above, save.
reproach over, II. ie. 744.
I hide by putting a
Theo. 25. 201.— dash against, II. -. 6.

spindle,
I listen
I
to — learn,
draw out wool, put upon a
spin— spin out events, ordain, Od.
II. -. 562.

,
/,
, , ,
, ,
cover upon, conceal from, II. . 115.
give a summary view.
ov, funeral, mournful pipe, Plut.

,, a dirge, 2. 378.
. 64. Szot
themselves decreed, Od.
—•.,
the gods have of

aor. 2.
525.

upon, scrape with a grater, II. . 638.


I grate
.

}, ,
8. 606.

tal,

,
-,
-,
ov,
wretched,
f. ,
,,fr.
subject to death, fa-
death, Call. Ep. 40.
I proclaim against or upon,
Septem, 640. publish, E. 1. 1. 10.— offer

,, ,,
publicly, set a price upon, Herod. 7. 113.
I scratch, graze, Apollonid. 5.
I sleep upon, fall asleep.
ov, common, a partner, Andr. 121.

communicate, Dem. 855. 6.


watch over,

,
lie upon.
I negotiate by Thesm. 1068.
cuckovv-like,

^^, ,
,
means of a herald, offer terms of peace, vaunt, make a vain
Thesm. 1160. Thuc. 27.— I a re- show of, Thuc. 4. 1 26. glory in, Call. 3. 263.

,,
4. effect

,, ,
conciliation with,
, h,
Dem. 888. ult.
a truce, suspension of
I strike upon
smite, fell an ox, Od.
cut, lop off
443. .

,
,
,
hostilities, Dem. 61. 23. ov, 6, a thing to cut upon, ablock, Luc. 1.371.

,,, -, ,
deputation, embassy. I arm myself against.
by persons deputed from the king, Med. 736. f. ,, I adorn over and above,
I scatter upon, II. 858. . deck, embellish, II. 7. 3. 4.
ov, hazardous, dangerous, A. 2. furious, Choeph. 624.
ov, 6, q,

,
5. 3. danger, risk
,
adv. in rase, furiously, Prom. 162.

,,
,
adv. dangerously,

,
press, threaten with danger, Philoct. 508. help, succour

f.


I act as an ally, I
defend, ward off, A. 5. 8.

, , ,
I endanger, run the risk, go
at the risk of the creditor, Dem. 915. 31.
f. I sound at, Pyth. 4. 41.
-
11. relieve from disease, alleviate, heal,
Att. 1. 4. 13.
, succour, reinforcement, Acts

, , , ,
I break by pressing upon,

;,
, ,
ywp?h might be broken in sen-

entreaty, Thuc. 4. 37.

, ,
distorted, Luc. 1. 232.
,/,
timent, might relent so as to give way to

graded by being compared with something


bent,
de-
26. 22. Thuc.

. —
ov, 6, ally
— productive of
ov,
1. 32.— relief, O. 17. 13.
relief,
alleviation,

tuords,
auxiliary,
A. 4. 5. 10.
Andr. 28.
alleviative, Orest.
Olym. 1. 177.
1 225.

re-

,
, , ,
inferior, Luc. 2. 492.

. weep over or again.


ov, mourned, doleful, Ran. 695.
shout at, shout in praise of, ap-
inforcement, Thuc. 4. 52.
^;,
.
ov, 6, philosopher, Epicurus
,
ov, Epicurean.
I lighten, alleviate,

, ,
plaud, Od. x. 351. —
close, fold up. 1. 6. 19. buoy up, Theog. 629.

,
,
,,
, —
Call. 3. 23.

,
ov, 6, «j, an heir or heiress, Dem.
940. 1 0. rich

,
. , ,—
distribute by lot,
allot, assign,
appellation,
Dem.
surname
184. 6.
—im-
/3. 419.
fr. a head
I draw to a head,
U. x. 455. destine, xh. 734. sanction,
fulfill,

what is upon the head, an ornament for


ov, ,

, ,
the head, Hipp. 201.

^,
putation, A. 9. 4. for
sc.

61.

, ,
2, , ,
,
by name.
accusation, (Ed. T. 537.
ov, invited, summoned, Thuc.
denominated— reprehensible.
bend towards, lie against, in-
4.
ej, membrane of the brain.

I shake, brandish over— move


the oars, ply, Apoll. 1. 552.
f. |<y, I shout to, bawl at.

, , having power over,

', ,
cline, verge upon, p. pass.

,,
hangs over, is contiguous to, Apoll. 2. 420.
predominant
adv. with superior force, II. 67. 81.
or
.

,
,,
— , , ,,
II. ,. \2\, planks
closed one upon another— I shut to, Ec-
cles. 420.
, sloping, Plut. 5. 180.
inclination,
ov, , a couch.
throw into disorder,
. 7. 12. inflexion

II. a. 7.
I gain power over, acquire the
sovereignty, E. 7. 1. 2.

force, Herod. 5. 71.


sovereignty, A. 7. 6. 31.
,
prevail over
keep in subjection, JLong. § 17.— seize by
power,

, subjugation, Thuc. 1.41.


overpower, Eccles.

4. 12.
,
475
(>, I
,,
hang upon, im- ,, I fall upon, meet with, find,
— —

II.
476

- y.

,
,
pend, threaten, Apoll. 3. 483.
caused to hang upon, brought upon, Theog.
206. suspend from, Is. 22. 24.

Luke
f.

ernriKgihoit,
hoj, decide upon, determine,
23. 24. — decree, 2 Mace.
adv. with choice, Apoll.
, , decision—
4. 47.

criterion, critical
2. 301.
23.— meet
-,
-,, ,
.7\, ,
,,
with changes, experience,
having dropped, i. e. dwelling,
among friends, Olym.

f.

f.

I
moan
impede, O.
—revel thus
feast upon
6. 10.
a keeper of bees, Zonas
over, S. Elect. 285.
8. 4.
in,
6.

^,
skill,

,,
Long.
, , the yard, , ,.
6. Mars may be to on war. see
said feast

, sail

,
PhoNi. 747. Horat. Od. — break on
1. 2. in

, ,,
I approbation,
rattle in clap, a intrude, Acharn. 978.
feast,
Amos 6. 5. —beat upon, Luc. 327. 1. , a reveller— guest.

,
6,

,, ,
, .
beaten, levelled, paved,
ov, encomiastic, an epithet of
ct, ov,

,, on the pavement,
f.
3. 14.
I beat upon, drive in,
those hymns sung
festivals," Nem. 8. 85.
in praise of heroes at
Pyth. 10. 82.
Thesm. 1013. strike with, Plut. 3. 828. sitting at
,,^,
the oar, prepared for

.
& ^,
I cover over, conceal from, rowing, Acharn. 230.— rowers

,,
Eur. Supp. 296. I am con- nearest the stern, as opposed to

cealed—hide myself.

he collected
much as he was
his forces, concealing
able,
.
them as
he collected them
1. 1. 6,
^,
the foremost rowers ships of war as fur-
nished with more oars than other ships.

7, I receive an additional share,

obtain after or next, (Ed. C. 1299.

,
,
,, ,

,
with

,^,
,
all possible secrecy.
ov, hidden, Olym. 8. 92.
, a covering, Plut. 7. 80.
caw, croak, Equit. 1048.
I acquire, possess over and
above, have in addition, Thuc.
,
'^acquisition, something added
4. 61. attain.
to support,
hold, keep in, Andr. 294.

priate, 1 Tim. 6. 12.


— invade, Herod. 8. 115.
I lay hold of
Mat. 14. 31. secure, appro-

seize, Acts 16. 19.
wrest, pervert
for the purpose of accusation, Luke 20. 26.
— seize an opportunity, Polyb. 4. 49. 4.
— lay hold of another for the purpose of

, ,,, ,,&, ,',


superinduced habit or faculty.
to nature,
ov, acquired, superadded, Plut. aiding, assist, protect, Acts 9, 27. Heb. 2.
6. 239. —
acquired land, i. e. land aban- 16. hold in, repress, Polyb. 27. 6. 5. lay —
doned by the sea, Herod. 2. 5.-— new
friends, opp. to ,,
Ay. 1. 36.
slay the slain, Antig. 1042.
hold of to censure, animadvert upon, 3.
26. 6. per. pass,
himself of, Luc. 1. 69.
hath possessed

, ,
the rites due to the dead,
',, for ^.

, ^,
f.

Od.
I perform
,-
291,
, the laying hold, M. Supp. 428.
ov, Ion. for
detected, Herod. 3. 69.
caught,

, -, ,
ot.

pay funeral honours. laid hold upon, seized by


f. , establish a colony
beat upon, beat to the sound,
among.
ov,
convulsions or any violent affection
ject to phrensy, Dem. 794. 3. Plut. 9. 188.
sub- —

Polyb. 30. 13. 9. rattle, Luc. 1. 234. ring. ,
c, 5j, liable to fits or phrensy,

,
wealth or power, E.
, renowned, illustrious for
5. 1. 33. glorious, Po-
epileptic, 7. 780.
I am seized with epilepsy,

),lyb. 1. 16. 4. adv. with more am frantic or mad, 3 Reg. 21. 15.
^,, ,
,
splendour or success, 5. 23. the laying hold

,
olc,

I roll down upon, E. 3. 5. 13. of, a disease called the morbus comitialis,
— one on another, up, Luc.
496. —
roll pile 1. or the falling sickness, epilepsy— censure,

^/
,
over as waves over a Plut. 6. 127.
,'), ,
roll ship.
upon — heap up.
f. I roll
upon, swell in billows,
I roll , I shine upon.
the spring having shone forth, when

,
,- ,
roll one wave on another— dash upon. the spring appeared in its lustre, was ad-
,
,,&, ,
f.

ward, 2. 2. 22.
I bend towards, stoop for-

Luc. 2. 654, leaning towards the council.


^, vanced so that the weather was fair and
settled, Herod.
I
8. 130.
cause to forget, Od.
— forget
. 85. - am

,
confirm, ratify,
f. I forget a duty,
have determined us to die, sealed remiss in, neglect, Heb. 13. 2. Phil. 3. 14.
our death, Orest. 860. A. 3. 2. 26. —forget a favour, am unmindful, 4. 1. .
^, ,, —

,
ov, curved, crooked, gibbous. 2. forget an injury, forgive, 6. 4. 24.
render gibbous, bend into a curve, I smooth —
render a harsh tone
Hes. u. 236. — are rolled soft, Luc. 3. 640. gloss over, Herod. 7. 9.
upon, rounded or folded up, Luc. 2. 412. I speak thereupon or in conse-
— — —— — — — —— — ——

, ,
,
,
477 478

,
quence, add in words, say of, Arist. Ethic. aim a whip, smack, II.
at with
. —Polyb. — —
. 748. earnestly desire, Od. . 344. aim —

,
6. quote, subscribe to, 2. 9. levy, en-
list, 4. 15. read, He- at a place, observe, Od. 220. .

rod.

, , , ,
name, John

,
1.

Acts 15. 40.

,
125.— reflect upon,

enrolled, classed with,


,
— am
5. 2.
called by

choice, selected,
.
1. 78.
an additional
have been
3. 3. 19.
/
select, am mad at, aor. l. m. v/as fu-
riously in love with,

aor. 2.
a wanton

dition, learn further, O. 10. 10.


II. . 160.
kiss,

,
I
Achar. 1200.
learn in ad-

, , one who
picked men, Polyb. 1. 47. 6. or

^, pour libation upon, Od.


I fail, lack, am wanting, Heb.
y. 341.
9.
confirms with additional evidence, a wit-
ness, evidence, Musse. 1. II. n. 76.

,
,
32. forsake, leave in want,

,
to time or place, A.
,, ,
I am
1. 8. 12.
the falling away, Thuc. 2. 49.
...
behind hand in regard
1. I superadd my testimony, at-
test, 1 Pet. 5. 12. confirm, Plut. 6. 164.
I call to witness, invoke
the gods as idtnesses, A. 4. 8. 5. bear tes- —

,
its

,
) , ,
,
white spots, Pint.

,
I

the leprosy, so called from
8. 666.
descry, see, U. . 12.
(part, of -
timony, Nubes, 495.

, calling to witness,
^,
stood for invoking the testimony of the
Thuc. 2. 74, he

,
, , ,
,
causing oblivion, Od.
su$3 forgetfulness
pain, recovery, Pyth.

oblivious, forgetful,

-
,
,,
com.
I.

Nub. 788.
. 222.
— forgetfulness of
89. oblivion.

gods, he continued to invoke the gods to
witness.

17.
I lay my
37. Od. . 590.—
f.

— handle, Theo.
hands upon
. 190.
, , the breast— cumber-

dress, II.
f. -

,
forgetfulness. 6, at

,
,
.
cities,

.
-,
, ,
, E.

.
,
forgetful heedless hearer,

, ,
a hearer

q,
3. 2. 17. fr.

,
Od. S. 379.
rattle, clap,
of forgetfulness, a
Jam. 1. 25.
become a prey, captured

,
, ,
.
,
some

,)'.^,&\&
II. ,
as a babe at the breast,
a worthless vagabond, Od. .

356.
at the breast, Iphig. T. 281.
at, smileupon,
smiling upon.

,
or sung over liable to an attack,

.
c.

»,
,
, , , , ,.
the vine press, Anacr. 52. fr.

I .
adv. grazingly, slightly,
I turn my eyes towards a person,
beckon, Od. . 11. i'r.
wink, glance at, Pint. 6. 187.
ov, 6, something said as an ap-
assailable, Herod. 1. 84. opp. to
,
ij, fighting for others when at-

tacked, defensive alliance, Thuc. 1. 44.

bride, presents,
,, sweets brought with a

,
.
dowry,
c.
II. /. 174.
careful, mindful,

-
,
pendage to the principal composition, epi- circumspect, 2. 6. 38. to an
— —

,
logue corollary, Long. § 9. reply, He- object of concern,
,
,
rod. 1. 27. songs composed in Thuc. 1. 5, whom it might be matter

,
of concern to know, who might be con-

- expressive, Eur.
praise of the golden fleece

,
.

,16.
must weigh,
Elect. 719.

» ,
I reflect
it is
upon, mind, E. 7. 5.
necessary to consider,
),
cerned to know,

,
the care or management of affairs
adv. carefully, attentively,
, superintendence
. . . 4.
— care,

,
«j,

,
,
,

,, .
ing,

,
- ,
reflection, consideration.
having a spike upon it, sharp-
pointed, Hipp. 222.
on,

ov, left over and above, remain-


the remainder, ui
the rest, Herod. 6. 33. Polyb. 15. 10.
,
.
concern
1. 6.
— study,
12.

,
you pay regard, or take


.
profession, pursuit,
12. 13.
care, E. 4. 6. 2.
heheldinestimation,minded.
I take care of,
mind, attend to— superintend, provide for,
.
art,

,
,sorrowing,
the fare due for a bath.
, subject

grieve over, 2 Mace. 4. 37.


I
I loosen a knot
solve, explain, Mark 4. 34.
loosen a difficulty,
loosen a dis-
to additional grief,


compunction.

— , ,
6. 3. 2.— practise,
ligent, vigilant,

-/,
must mind, attend

, .
it is
. 8. 4.
with, have to take care of, Phoen. 559.
Plut. 6.

-
265.— am di-
1.— am intrusted

necessary to take care


to, Azs. 2. 1. 28.
of,
szsi-

,
concern, business
— ,
}?,
,
pute, decide, Acts 19. 39. loosen a pri- 6, a superintendant, prasfect, di-
soner, release, liberate, Luc. 2. 874. rector, 30. fitted to
,
1. 20. —
,
solution, explanation, 2 Pet.
deliverance, Septem, 134.
take care of or superintend, attentive, O.

scoff at, taunt, Od. . 323. ,. -),


12. 19.
f. \]/, add a song, Septem, 866.
— — — —

,,
479

,75. — resent,
I arraign, accuse,
punish for neglecting a pro-

Herod. 1. ,,
, , si,
blameable
for
actively, blaming.
thou blamest,
480

,
mise, x. 65. desire, seek, . 225. Rhesus, 327.
II.

place, tarry
I wait upon or for
— keep my seat and not fall,
— remain in
.
a. '/, ,,, blame, Olym. 10. 11.
what is annexed to a
ro, fa-
—remain
I. 4. 8. same continue,
in the state,
^,
ble, e. its application, Luc. 3. 82.

,
i.

persevere — persist— remain ,


,,
body, hi the the upper mill-stone.
,
,
continue to
treaty, keep,
24.— remain
live, Phil.
adhere
a 1 .

to, E. 3. 4. 6. p.
in
m.

,
,
,
f. I mock
murmur, resound, Apoll.
at, taunt.
1.

,
wait in expectation, eagerly
I 938.
desire, Philoct. 521.

-,

,
permanent, lasting, Plut. 6.
634. everburning, Long. 12.
, remaining after the body, surviving, Plut.
-,—
,, , , f. ,,
f.

I
Igrumble at, II. . 20.
wink at, Vespae, 928.
w, ou, to be scorned, odious.
overload, Eccles. 833.
.
,
8. 218. dwelling on a subject, Long. 12. nauseating, Polyb. 31. 22.
ou, quite full, Call. 6. 134. behave with the temerity of
send for additional forces, a youth, am insolent, Plut. 10. 446.
.
-,
fetch for myself, Thuc.
I measure out
additional measure, Luc. 1. 344.— I add,
3. 261. give or lend more, Hes. s. 297.—
6. 21.
in addition, give

,.
,
a dock-yard,
I distribute or divide in shares, II.
626. give out to be fed upon,
I receive a portion to feed upon, con-
-
$,deal out, Polyb. 18. 15. 2. sume by feeding upon, spread itself, Polyb.
i-xifASTqov, ,
an additional measure. 14. 5. 7. said offire, Herod. 5. 101.— I lay

,,,
/,
25. 79.
-/?, ,
plot against, Od. . 437.
,
over-cunning, sagacious, Theo.

xt, mixed with the sheep,


said of goats, Call. 2. 51. This seems to al-
lude to Apollo, who though a god blended
,
,
hold of for feeding, occupy, appropriate,
invade, Olym. 9. 11.—
feeding upon, consumption, Plut. 3. 24.
,
an heir, consort,
tou, superintendant, guardian host, Pyth.
the

?-

,
11. 14.

.-, , ,
with men, and was fired with Admetus. ,
, the feeding upon, the right

,
-, ,
,
$73t

, ,
see Mat. 25. 33. But Ruhnken proposes
szst to

the furthest, Luc. 2. 910.

-,
referring
over-long, hence

.,,
of feeding, the use of pastures in a foreign
land, .
3. 2. .—
ing upon, consumption, Plut. 4. 86.
I nod at, intimate
, the feed-
assent to, Acts —
,

, ,
am enraged at, II. v. 460. 18. 20. Plut. 8. 314.
,
monthly

.
ou,
rites,
every month,

, , *) .
Herod. 8. 41.
plan, add new refinements,
rocks projecting over their basis, and thus
inaccessible, Luc. 1. 186.
ou, over the kidneys,

/, , ,
8. 8. 8.— plot against, Od. . 822. I spin, wind up, destine, II. . 128.

f. |«, I the things spun,


— mix with

,
mix one with another strangers; destined by the fates, Luc. 3. 599.
with, Thuc. 2. 1 ; 4. 118.
traffic mix blood, — imp. (fr. by redupl.)

,
,
shed, Pyth. 2. 59.— mix with honours, raise
to, Nem. 9. 74.— I mix with an enemy,
closely engage with, II. e. 505.

, ,,ou, mixt one on another, confused,

,., ,
promiscuous, Theog. 269.
I wind up thread, heap up, II. 97. 428.
'',,
Theo. 23. 61.
on board, Antip. Thess. 51.
I swim on the surface, float,

ou, abundant, Orph. 310.


.

,
,,, ,
, , , , , social inter-
,, gain a victory, triumph over.

,
,
course, commerce, E. 5. 1. 1. Thuc. 5. 35.
adv. in confusion, disorderly.

.
,
dwell, labour upon, Od. f. 66.

§7\ ,
I cause to be
remembered, call to mind, II. o. 662.
make mention
,, of, record, Herod. 1 . 5. ezsi-
ou, or
(Ed. C. 1144.

I
ou, triumphal song,

go
a festival for
victory, the prize of victory, S. Elect. 694.
Olym. 8. 99.
,
to, frequent,
cover with snow, K. 8. 1.
Theo. 8. 43.

, . we may have battle in put my mind, think upon, medi-

,,, , . ,,
our minds, i. e. resolve to fight, . 103. tate, intend, he
a woman hired, aimed at the dominion of the sea, Herod.
ou, allotted by fate, 3. 122.

,,
,
-, ,
superadd adultery, i. e. to the
act of deflowering, Luc. 3. 592.
an invader, Septem, 628.
come upon, assail, Trach. 868.
etsivoix, ,
,
design, machination.
, inventive, ingenious.
6,
thought, imagination pur-
ij,

pose, sinister intention, Acts 8. 22. con-




— ——
481

,,,,
, -
, , 482

, ,
trivance, ingenuity, . 2. 3. 8. xoivy sprinkle over, Theo. 2. i8. — ov,
voice, common sense, Polyb. 6. 5. spread upon, sprinkled, Luc. 3. 20.

,
&,
,
6.

, ,
,
,
goad, Luc.

,
,

f.

2.
subject to disease, sickly.
by night, nightly, Leon. Tar.

ov,

|&,
I tarry over night.
on marriage,
a gash upon, stab,
I inflict
338. in 11. . 240,
nuptial.
, -,
6. 4. 14.
ov, level, even, plane surface, c.
opp. to Luc. 3. 69. ezsup
a plane surface, a level ground, E.

I obey, imp.
he complied with, II. a. 345.
for

sots-

,
mademewise,ofwhichthepresentiso7JWOTa. I come upon, Od. o. 407.

, I nod, slumber over. f. -, I send, bring upon, see


f.

,
dispense, administer, supply, Phi- Hemsterh. on Luc. 1. 208. send a remedy,
loct. 169.fr. —
apply, Phoen. 1556. cause, produce, 3. 37. —
send in addition,

,
€7,
. ,, ,
f. teat, I throw on the back or

shoulders, Here. F. 362.

, ,£ , yellowish, K. 5. 22.

1 receive as a guest, entertain.


send again, .
4. 5. 8.
ov, a fifth and a half, a fifth,
the fifth part more, TLo. 3. 9.
pass over, sot; for

,,
I lodge, am entertained, Luc. for nor do ships

guest

,
, ,
2. 405. Apoll. 2. 764. I receive gifts as a

,,
,
when

, ,,
,
ov, a table to

,, , ov,

I
departing,

guests, a dresser, Acharn. 317.

, common
Agam. 1331.
dress meat upon

land,
make common, communicate.
, over wine, intoxicated.
11. . 422.
for
pass over, Od.

EOT/OTf rce6>,

upon, II.
,
f.

.
grow
s.

by syncop.
126.
I
175.
black, ripen, Philip. 3.
dark brown hare, K. 5. 22.
spread over or upon.
I fly, dart

f. , aor. 1.

, ,
SOTSOTsroaa, by sync, or I

381.

,
, , , - ,
upon, inspect, have before
— see

^,
,
I will
or

to, choose, . 167.


f. m.
take on myself an oath, will
I
my
cast
eyes,

for
my
II.
eye
.
come, fly upon, Pyth. 4. 43. aor.
Dor.
upon, having found, 10. 52.
phip. m. of
having come

was fixed, was


frozen or petrified, Luc. 1.13; 2. 413. had
1. part.

,
swear, II. a. 233. confirm by an oath.

^, ,
fixed itself,

, pierced, II. v. 442.

,
, , , ,one who adds one oath to an-
other, or does not fulfill his oath, a per-
jurer, II. x. 332.—

, I take oath on
oath, swear often, Phocvl. 1 4.
Mat. 5. 33.

,, ,
perjury, Sap. 14. 25.
forswear, —
upon a
f.
,
f.

, for
overspreads, Od.
aor. 2.
upon, surprise.
I spring
a springing upon.
drink after, 6. 2. 1 1.

.
.
1 fill
43.
I fall
up. sot/otA-

upon — fall
John

,
the interval or distance by friend, embrace, lean upon,
which a pair of mules surpass a yoke of —
13.25. fall upon an enemy, attack —de-

,
oxen

.
tent in

,
in making a furrow of the same ex-
the same time, II. . 350. end-ridge,
scend upon, Acts
,,
,,
8. 16. crush,
things fit for sailing, provi-
Rom. 15. 3.

,
fr. for sions for a voyage, for or accord-
, 6, a keeper, Od.
405. keeper v.

,
ing to Suidas for things on the

,
of the 'peace, ruler, legislator, 11. v. 450. surface, moveable goods, furniture, (opp.
», suitable to the substance or to fixtures) apparel, stores, baggage*

,
nature of a thing suitable to the nature Aot. 2. 7. 2. Luc. 364.

-,
1.

, ,,
of the body, necessary suitable to the na- wanderover, roam upon.

.,
I

,
ture of the soid, essential, eternal, Mat. 6. feigned, pretended, false.
, ov,
=7.,,
1

, 1. aor. 1. I clap

,
adv. altogether, Hes. . the hands at,applaud, Theo. 9. 22.
262. as for the most part. adv. to the furthest,
chaunt over, accompany with
chaunting paeans, Pint. 2. 450.
brandish at, Choeph. 1 60.
am present at, arrive. , ,
Thuc. 2. 34, that he
might be heard as far as possible by the
crowd.

,, I twist one thing on another, en-

, ,
i,\ixo\\<\eOyex and above, tangle, Luc. 1. 512.

,,
inter-
. —intermixture—twine.
, ,,
procure in addition, 6. 3. 1. course
imp. eviirotgfa'au, they were or adv. more, further.

,
present, closely at hand, A. 3. 4. 1 4.
I pass closely
march* in addition to the rest, A. 3. 4. 18.
Thuc. 5. 10. Polyb. 5. 83.
or efttotUYfa, I spread upon,
by,

,
,, —^^,
&>

ov, full "of,


beyond others,
Thuc. 2. 53, he introduced
enormities to a greater extent.

2
Herod. 1. 119.
aor. 2 fsri-
— — — —— — —

,—
,
483 484

,
,47.
I sail

assail,
,,
upon or
invade, Herod. I. 70.
against,

the arrival of a fleet, Polyb.


1. 29. 5.— sailing against, E. 2. 1. 18.
II. u. 312. y. the same straight line, Polyb. I. 47. con-
ceal, intercept, Long. 32.

,,
that which intercepts the eye, Plut. 9. 684.
,
the intercepting of the eyes,
-^, —

;;)5, ,—
I fill up,' fulfill, 2 Mace. 3. 30.
I strike upon, smite, beat
Polyb. 3. 71. 3. obstacle, Plut. 6. 461.


in front, before, Eur.

--,
,
with, 11. x. 500. smite with words, rebuke, Supp. 514. in preference, Plut. 5. 854.
1 Tim. 5. 1. — impute /zmg as a disgrace, I add over and above, Long.

Prom. 80. hurl against, Nem. 10. 133. —
44. make my way forward, improve.
, -,
,
-',
«yraAijf/g, smiting upon, rebuke. Ez«/;s£o<pAi/i>o i<i!i/,appearbefore,Apoll. 3.916.

', ,2.2. &,


1

turn upon, £sj/- thrust forward, push against.


for
.
,
I

revolving, 261. sneeze at, fore-


--,
•/}.

f. «yff<y, I breathe upon, bode good or evil, Od. . 545. Theo. 7. 96.

,
I breathe, Luc. 1.

,
inspire, Hes. u. 871. Ezsrxrxptxi, I fly, 821.
light upon, II. v.

,
-,
,
306.—favour, Polyb. 11. 19. 5. Long. § 13.

,-,, ,
, breathing upon, inspiration.
divinely inspired, Pint. 3. 807.
I choke, Luke 8. 7. ,
, --, ,
that which folds over, the
folding doublet of the corslet, Plut. 3. 780,
falling upon, occurrence.
I spit upon, Lev. 15. 8.

,
f.

-, a, ov, on my feet, CEd. T. 1376.


— desire ,, go about, traverse, II. y. 196.

,earnestly,

-;, ,
I
Rom.
desire over
1 .

earnest desire, Rom. IS. 23.


and above

~,
-,
24. long for, Luc. 1.211.
the reviewing of an army.
hardness, tumour.
I fly upon or over.

,
, ,-, .
ov, earnestly desired, Phil. 4. 1. f. ply the red, whip,

',
a superintendant of a flock,
. &, ,
spur, Icj. 7. pxQhg, 11. fr.

a shepherd, Od.

swell,
131.
I lie, float on the surface
heave as the surface of the ,, . sea, Luc.
ov, arched like the hind
legs of a hound, K. 4. 1
bent

f.
bent.
wo>,
in,

I
.

become remiss, relax,

,
2. 603. Luc. 2. 792. fr.
...

,
4, opinions most on the surface, I sprinkle upon, Try ph. 65.
•,

,
the most superficial or generally received f. sew upon, Mark 2. 22.

,- -^,
opinions. chaunt over, Luc. 1. 461.

,light

, , -,
sleep
adv.
ov,

—prominent,
superficial,

superficially, slightly
adv. on the surface, on the top, Herod. 1.187.
/5 , ,
hoary-headed, Dem. 267.
one who

, an attendant, CEd. T.
is
2.
Dem.
5. 5.

grey on the top,


1418.

1345.
,
, , ),^-
Ion. for
p. 211.


I

incline,
sacrifice upon, imp.

, , prone to, favourable.


offered holy things,

hang over,

put
upon a break, stop up a rupture — stop up
II. f. 99.

I
Od.

adv. generally, for the most part. an entrance by rolling a stone upon it, Plut.

,
,
5.
,
Ezstxovsn),
labouring, E.
laborious
I labour over or at, persevere in

szsizsovcoTxrx,
6. 1. 4.

— painful, wretched, .
adverbially, most pain-
, c.
2. 3.
2. 658 ; 6. 659. fasten with, imp.
they closed, barred, II. 454.
I flow upon the surface instead of
mixing with. II. /3. 754. flow to one place, —

.

-,fully,
Polyb. 8. 79. 6.
adv. with toil or difficulty, flock together, . 723.
^. — 27.
overflow, abound,
accrue, Luc. 1. 460. cause the
--
,,
-, ,
^,
over, Plut. 10.
"Rzsi

--,
,,
f.
I

,,
resort to,
8. — overrun, Polyb.
I clasp
a clasp, Call.
-^,.
Luke

on, Polyb. 39.


2. 32.
8. 4.— run
1. 12. 4.
1.
voice to flow upon, speak against,
must say

saippyf&a,
-
in addition, Plut. 6. 129.
adv. in express terms, distinctly.
,,— an address of the chorus

,
, ,
become, impersonally, to the spectators an adverb
it
I

becomes, it is graceful, 251. Theo.


,
II. , ov, adverbial.

.—,
,
25. 40. comeliness. address to— speaking against,

,
szst&pzsetce,

-, cut as with a saw, Antip.Thess. 26. censure, Luc. 3. ov, spoken

, , ,
,
adv. all along, to a great distance.
throw upon, Plut. 1. 115.
against, branded, 0. 4. 2. 632.
harangue, declaim over.
, influx— abundance, 349.
«.

, ,
run, shoot out, Dion. 582. Luc. 129. 1.
spread before, II. 627. . — a torrent of Androm.
, throwPet.upon, Od.
evils,

,
ErsizsooirifAi, aor. 1. cr f. I hurl,
310. — commit
^',
dispatch, II. a.

I
I
58.— hurl at, .
come forward to,
go forward, proceed.
run out against, proceed in
94.
surprise.
e.

, , obstreperous the sup-


port of another, a second,
proach, Antig. 419. in,
6,
to, 1 5. 7.

..
- ,
in
390. — re-
I
— — — —— —

,,,
485
make an obstreperous noise, loudly ap-
plaud, Orest. 899.
or

assail with reproaches.
I turn, revolve with
a whizzing noise as the vanes of a windmill
,,,
sick,
spector.

dered,
Mat. 25. 36.

a, ov,
II I

necessary to be consi-
, o, an
486
in-

,
— I rapidly spin, destine, Lye. 585. Euni.
421.—

,
adv. with a whiz, with
sounding speed, Here. F. 860.
quillity not to be looked upon by us from
is

the same place with others, is not to be.


Thuc. 6. 18, tran-

,
^,
,
, . ,
. ), ,
f. wo, sup up, Plut. 4. 310.

f. ,
I instigate with violent
noise* put on a fierce dog, Vespae, 763. fr.
of the same origin with
I fit
or
upon
I bring disgrace or stain upon,
— dress, adjust.
regarded as equally important to us as to
others.

discussion,
,. observation, consideration
4. 6. 1.
put furniture on a beast, pack
I

up, load, Acts 21. 15.— harness— repair,


— visiting the sick.

,
disorder, Plut. 9. 291.

,
protect, Septem, 167.

-,
draw to myself, (fr. for
Dem. 30. 17.—get ready,
prepared, Eccies. 1139.
reparation embellishment, —

, ,, ,.
«j.c, jj,

flowing upon, abundant, Eum.


ou, Plut. 3. 794. —
furniture, Dem. 819. 25.
,
f. ,
905.— sprinkled upon, Plut. 9. 611.
I flow upon so as to swell

or augment strengthen, encourage, con-
, one who furnishes or sup-
plies, a provider, Dem. 618. 4.
,
one who lives in a tent,

, Herod. —
firm, reinforce, 8. 14. public, Ajax,
I strengthen, exert myself,
imp. 580, do not shed stage-sorrows, do not

, ,
they put forth their strength upon, vigo-

,
rously applied themselves to, Od. . 107.
weep in public.
,, a Spartan festival
, , a place annexed to the stage
-

, ,, ,
II. a. 529, became strong,
bristled like quills on the porcupine. where machinery was managed.
,, its

,
corroboration, Long. $11. dwell with, rest on, 2 Cor. 12.
I

Luc.

,
2. 84.
- f.

load
1 put panniers on, saddle,
panniers.
9.occupy, dwell in, Polyb. 4. 72.
f. ,
I enjoin, Ajax, 567. rush —

,, , - ,
I shakethrust in the face, II. o.
at, upon, assail, Hipp. 438. intrust —
230.— stir up against, Orest. 255. bring I am commanded, thou
upon— threaten, II. . 167. wast charged with, Antig. 1319.
,

,
,
upon,
, {)
,
I drive upon, urge, II. v. 325. 87.

. 1
I
43. p. pass,
put myself on another, rush
for
q, an injunction, Dem. 1161.
11.— an action by which the protestation
of an appellant was proved

,
, , ,
,
impels, a. 173. plup.

tacked him,
ov,
had rushed upon, furiously
s. 438.
having an impression upon,
for
at-

.
false,

his eyes,
1154. 22.
ov, having a shade over, shading
(Ed. C. 1721. obscure life.
overshadow, Plut. 8. 100.

,
, ,
, ,
4. 5. 1 4.— remarkable, sc. jump upon, float, Ruffin. 3.
— , —
distinguished fur
Herod. 9. 41.
wisdom coined,
-noted, Mat. 27. 16.— - , inspector, overseer over-
seer ofafiock, pastor, bishop,
— overseer of a
1 Tim. 3. 2.

,
by a

, ,
impression—
I put a mark
adv. signally.
upon, distinguish
guardian
one who surveys the enemy, a scout,
. — president, Dem. 421. 27.— aimed
city, praefect,
spy,

, , ,,
sign, aor. 1. m. I sig- II. 38.
nify, Luc. 1. 725. shall at, level with, adv. with well di-
exhibit a sign in themselves, shall glory, rected aim, skilfully, Herod. 3. 35.

,
Ion. 1591. I warrant, Dem. 310. 21.

adv. for
,
indication

line, equally, II. 3. 3. 18.


—a symptom.
in an equal —
I direct my eyes to an object, aim
at— survey- see, take heed, Heb. 12. 15.
I inspect, consider,
1.— superintend enjoin, O. 4. 8. —
3. .

,
, ,
I

f. ,
instigate, Vespae, 702.
shorten I my range, con-
«?, ,
inspection, the office of an
inspector, bishopric, visitation of the op-

,
centrate forces, and thus it differs from pressed, deliverance, Luke 19. 44.— visita-

,
I withdraw my forces, cause to tion ofjustice on the oppressor, vengeance,
retreat, E. 5. 4. 50. 1 Pet. 2. 12.
,
, <,\\ .
procure provisions for a
I f. I veil in darkness, over-
journey, gather supplies, A. 1. 5. 4. shade, Dem. 23. 26. Long. 35.
a supply of corn, A. 1. 5. 9. am
indignant at, Od. u. 306.
halt, hobble upon, Apoll. 1. drink like a Scythian,
f.

669. i. e. intemperately, Herod. 6. 84.


inspect — consider, visit the sulkv, . 3. 5.
22
— —— — —

,
,,
487

,—
, eye-brows, Theo. ,
24. 116. hindrances of my thoughts,

488

,
gravity, Polyb. 26. 5. 6. doubts that retarded me, Antig. 231. ex-

,, ov, even
I scoff,


joke.
sneer
scoffing, taunt, Plut. 5. 141.
s-zr/ffofi», I make equal.
at, taunt, citement, instigation incursion, impres-
sion, 2
siris-wri»,
Mace.
,
6. 3.
superintendence, Plut. I.
sj,

,

/, ,
with, A. 4. 7.
ov, woeful, dismal, Hes. x. 264.

e-ptqfivysgoK, adv. bitterly, Od. y. ] 95.


drive, scare away, Sirac. 22. 2!.
f. draw to, attract, drag
I
9.— draw together the pre-
puce, become uncircumcised, 1 Cor. 7. 18.
,,
,,
,
310.


— controul,

.
go\r ernment— an office of
trust, commission, 10. 345.
ov, o,

—an importunate beggar, Od. . 455.


superintend — urge
preside over,
8. 1. 6.-—
president, praefect

-,
— umpire

,
instruct, it is

— reach, attain, Ajax, 780. necessary to inspect, must superintend, O.

,
,
I draw to myself, arrogate, adduce, Luc. 1.

--, ,
91. —
I am allured, seduced, Herod. 1. 91.

self, self-sought.

&,
on,
a hinge, valve, Herod.
attracted, brought
Od. . 72.
7. 91.
upon one's
7. 35.
ijc, % accurate knowledge— know-

ledge of universal tmdhs, science, theory,


speculation, Arist. Ethic, . 3.—knowledge
acquired by practice, skill, art a just no-

,-, —

,, ,
, »,
? {,

, attractive, Polyb. 4. 84. 6.
f. I pour wine, ,,. ,—
tion or a correct definition, Long. 6.
c. scientific, wise,

,
,
sprinkle upon shed tears, Theo. 23. 38. Od. 374. skilful in, judicious, circum-
,
-, ,, the pouring of Jam. 13.— adv. wisely,

,, , , ,.
spect.

,,
3.
libation upon, libation — truce, Thuc. 5. 32. skilfully.
hasten, urge, U. -. 430. ov, scientific,

I
f. ,
I hasten, Theo. 16. 93.

I hasten to, approach.


shed seed upon, impregnate,
the scientific principle or part, Arist. Ethic.

-,— -,
. 1. theoretic, cpp. to
ov, capable of being scientifically
725.-—,
,
,
Plut. 9.

, ,, , , ,
446.—
upon— oi
ij, a second or an after sowing, Hes. .

f.
,
6, y, sown or ingrafted
those sown by the pre-
sent race, posterity, Eum. 670.
,— by sync,
Ion.


known,
Arist. Ethic, . 3.
Ion.
the object of science,

I grow in the
ear, grow to maturity, Apoll. 1. 972.
I trample upon, Call. 4. 277.
go to. to go

/,
upon breathing, breathe upon, Eum. 904.

.
follow after,

,
aor. 2. I
send orders to, enjoin upon by

,
meet with, experience, encounter, incur, I

,II. r. 294. yj. 52. accompany, favour, He-
rod. 1. 32. kvofcxt, or

-,. ov, rushing upon, Hipp. 574.

,
. ',
a letter or messenger,
106.— I delegate.
s^/s-aA^e^aTo^TOjCommission/Theo.Char^.
Luc. 1. 393. (Ed. T.

'
I drop upon, in- adv. in robes, Hes. x. 287.
--^, , , a delegate, a commissioner
^,
still, infuse, Luc. 2. 411.
I weigh, Agam. 172.
I lodge with as a guest, Plut.

418; 3.
of the navy, E.
-., , a Anacr.
q.
1. 1. 15.
letter, epistle, 9.

,
,
\,,
am billeted as a soldier—passjvcly, a command, injunction, Prom.
3. 1 30.
am let, 5. 40. -,, ,
, the re- ov, epistolary.
3.
-
,,
, ,, ,
ceiving of soldiers by a billet, Plut. 3. 517. forces or demanded by letters,
-

,,
ov, 6, a host, master of a feast,
Plut. 8. 415. Callim. Ep. 32.
the pass, form of
I place myself over a thing so as to have it
tinder my eyes, know, learn, am acquainted
, -, rather forces which existed only on paper,
nominal forces, Dem. 45. 12.

1 4. fr.
ov, o, a letter-carrier, E.
) — a vice-admiral.
f. —
6. 2.

with, Acts 19. 15. comprehend, under-— or



stand am accustomed, able, A. 1. 4. 14.
I stand over a thing so as to make it the
f. , I groan at or in consequence, Luc.
II. . 301. Batrach. 72. II. .
),
79.

-,
2. 827.

,
subject of thought, suppose, imagine, He-
rod. 1. 122.

,,
1. 1. 3.

hands, Od.
adv. skilfully,

adv. standing by,

,
v. 54.

the standing over a thing,


vj,
i. e. with his
.
own -,
lies. 841. Trach. 949.
0.

f. I put a crown upon,


adorn with crowns, Olym. 9. 168.
,\
I put a crown or a garland upon,
S. Elect. 443.
aor. 1.

crown a goblet,
m. they filled brim full for them-
,
-, -, , ,
superintendence, station of one after an- selves, II. x. 470.
other, Polyb. 1. 26. 12.— dwelling upon crowned tuith wine, brim
with pleasure, Long. 39. halting, A. 2. 4. — full, Ik S. 232. covered with, Archil. Fr. 21.
14, — obstacle, delay, Plut. 6. 175. I form into a tomb. Leon. Tar. 92.
— — — — —

,
,
489

,
f. , , ,.
shine upon, Luc. 2. 426.
I

,
together, accumulation, 40,
,
I

0}, 490

,
ov, Ion. for at the hearth, the supplementary terms of a treaty,
domestic, social, Od. . 265.

,
,,
,
those at the same hearth, a
Polyb. 3. 27. 7.
run together, Mark

,, ), ,
,
9. 25.
family, Herod. 5. 72. Jupiter I drag to, attract — drag along, K.
the guardian of hospitality. 5. 13. carry away the hearers with rapid
,
), , ov,

-
a place for ships or naval fluency, Dem. 496. 23. draw a

, ,
stores, a naval magazine, Od. . 265. ir.Wiov. long train, i. e. wear long robes,Luc. 2. 139.

, f.
f.

,I gather, heap upon.


Att. I shut the
said of letters drawn one upon
the other, or running into each other so as
mouth,

- ,
,
cause to

,
against ,
silence
fall

— make war
on
I
by refuting,
my face, Luc. 2. 419.
engage in an expedition
Tit.

or arm against, Ajax,


1. 11. to be indistinct, opp. to

3. 607.
he expectorated profusely,

a track, .

,
9. 18.

, ,
1075. lay a siege to, Troad. 22.

,
I enlist, engage in the military
service, invade,imp.£7!riffr^i6T?ysro,infested,

,
Med. 1185.

expedition,

2,
,
armament
sj, Ion. ,, an
against, Herod. 9. 3.
form a camp against, E.
ov, ,
, dilatoriness, neglect.
, the standing together,
or collecting of many in the same place,
concourse, disturbance trouble, fatigue
arising from the
of visitors,

hurry of bushwss or a crowd
2 Cor. 1 !. 28.
I turn together, collect.

*', —encamp near. ,

,
4. 8. 33. a ball of leather put on the

- f.. -, I turn towards, turn, point of a sword, Polyb. 10. 20.

, —
draw back, y. 370.
II. cause to return, — ,,
slippery dangerous, Acts 27.
return, turn to myself, attract the atten-
— turn to the right way, \,
9. adv. liable to slip,

,
,
tion, Plut. 6. 257. I am in danger, Polyb. 6. 25. 4.

,,
convert, James 5. 1 9. I turn inclined to, Plut. 6. 327,

,
myself, turn to, visit, O. 3. 13. I slay one upon another, slay a
Long, he does not so
12, victim on the grave, offer, . 7. 3. 2.
he has not the same vehe- bind on, Plut. 10. 780. clasp.

,,
turn himself, tie,

,
, ,
mence and

, - ,
versatility.
turning to one's self the eyes
of men, conspicuous, Choeph. 347.
, , abrupt, rapid, .
to a writing, a signer, Luc.

,
,
I set
ov,
my seal upon, ratify.
6, one who
232.
2.
sets his seal

,
6. 3» 5. clasped on.

^,, adv. abruptly, hastily. ov, ,a clasp, ,
ov,

II. y. 331.

,,
adv. turning here and there, adv. near, H. Apoll. 3.

,, ,
hastily, abruptly,
,
ing to, conversion, Acts 15.
II. . 48 a.
, —, the turn- II. .
adv. in a series, one^fter another,

,
665. deinceps,Theo. 14. 69. see ffp^or.
— , -
,
3. attention, f. or aor. 2.
heed, Dem. 158.— change animadversion, — — I have my hand upon, lay,
Polyb. 4. 20. 12. —
correction, castigation, hold, II. a. 219. — hold over, . 244.
cover,,
4. 4. 8.— event,
evolution, resort. —hold on, prevail, spread — hold back a
ov, turning or attending to others, stream, stop, dam — hold back the reins,

inquisitive, courteous, hospitable

, moderate— hold

.
attract- curb, direct, to the lips,

9,
ing the attention of others, frequented, ad-

,,
,
,
mired, Od. a. 177.
I turn about, visit, Od. o. 486.
I turn myself about, tra-

.
apply— hold at mark, aim at, Od.
hold up, suspend, Herod. 1. 32. see
,
15.

holding back, restraint— par-


simony, Od. . 451. the ,, .

, ,
verse, Med. 666. holding of one thing over another, a pre-
ov, the chapter of a pillar.
, a treaty of defensive -,—
text, pretence, . 71.
upon or over — render

,,
vj, I prevail

, Dem. Luke
alliance, 160. 13. strong persevere, insist, 23. 5.
I gather together, Mat. 23. 37. dry up a sore, allay an inflamed
assemble against, Polyb. 5. 95. 7.— concen-

,
trate, Long. 24.
ijc, the assembling in one place

or together, Heb. 10. 25.

^, ,
f. ), bind together upon,
,
wound, fr. restrain, Plut. 8. 470.
,
iron fastened on a wheel
ov,
to preserve it, felly, II. . 725. fr.
I treasure up, procure in abun-
dance such teachers as would gratify their
.

,
con-

/,
nect, Long. 41.
up together, connection, Plut. 9. 508.

Long, 10. .—,


the tying

I put things together, pile up,

sQfy i, the putting


peculiar tastes, instead of accepting those
few who taught the gospel with uncom-
plying sincerity, 2 Tim. 4. 3.
aor. 2. &, . make an in-
—— —— — —
— — — —

, ,,
,
491 11 I 492
cision Herod. 74. —wound, Theo. death— , brought to an end,

,
in, 1.

,,
,1. 55.

, , . upon,
I stretch
tended upon, superadded, Od. a. 442.
stretching,
ex-

Theo. 25. 8.
- ,
finished, Herod.

consummation,
1. 117.
I bring to perfection
consummate, Plut. 7. 256.
— complete,

,
I disturb, interrupt. rise above the horizon enjoin,

22, , ~,
ger, a conqueror,
ov, 6, a helper,
Herod.
11. s. 808. aven- add, II.

so as to be
a. 25.
upon or above another, enforce
1 raise myself

,
67.

, , ,,
1.

Att. enjoin upon, have upon, II. /3. 802. rising to


authority over, Mark 1. 27. ordain —
place guide thy son as an auspicious star to guide
in the rear, A. 6. 5. 6.
the things ordered — , order,
the mariner, Pyth. 1. 135.
cut or gash upon, Dem.
make a

, , ,, ,, .
dictate
ordinance,
mandate, Pint.

Rom.
6.
, decree, appointment,
16. 26.
560. — Herod.
tax,
mg',
8. 89.
sj,
1018. 8. f. in.

10. 55. —
,—
I will cut short,
abridge, Luc. 2. 494. —amputate, cut, Theo.
interrupt, Polyb. 28. 19. 3.
on the point of

,
enjoined, appointed, pre-
ov, sj,

scribed, Pyth. 4. 421. bringing forth, Herod. 1. 108. fr.

, ,
ov, 6,

,
,
Ethic,

. ,
fitted to command, imperative, Arist.

,
. 10.
ov,over a grave, Plut. 9. 437.
a funeral song or oration, Luc.
—an epitaph,
f. I give additional pleasure,

I delight a person,
myself, take pleasure in, Od. £. 228.
, —
I delight

ov, pleasant

,2. 34.

. ,, - ,, .
1 hasten, Plut. 4. 237. 5. 666.
tinge with, shed upon, Anacr. 53.
1

,
I stretch to or over, increase
-
on account of, affording additional or after
delight, Arist. Ethic. /. 4. delightful

1. 274.
adv. with delight, joyfully, Plut.
—-

, ,
f.

— reach to, endure, A. 2. 5. opp. to I tie down to, attach, fix to,

,
I stretch myself to or overtake, Od. a. 218. see
upon, aor. 1. inf.
.
to stretch, ,
the coming upon so as to find,

, meeting with, Theo. Char. 12.

,
exert ourselves, 7. 5. 26. per.

,
has stretched itself over, overspreads, fitted to attain, most accessi-

,
, .
overhangs, Od.

,
naced, 11. . 736.
opp. to

,, , ,
19. .
tinued hanging over them, assailed, me-

extension, enlargement.
had con-

intent upon,

I raise a wall, fortify against,


ble, Polyb. 2. 29. 3.— successful.

Plut. 1. 193.
contrive artfully, plot against,
Luc. 1. 793.— aid with my contrivance,

improvement, Thuc.
v\, artifice,

1. 71.
,
$,
,
a, ov, c. Ion. C.
raise fortresses to guard a coast, E. 7. 2. fitconvenient, suitable neces-
for, —
20.


,
raise a wall against a town so as to

,, , , , ,,
^,
blockade it, lay a close siege,
Luc. 1. 62, hav-
ing raised' contempt as a fortress against
wealth, having opposed contempt to wealth
,
a fortress, castle
sary
oi

), , ,

favourable, auspicious, Herod. 9. 37.
friends, relatives or disciples.
necessary expense, wages,
things necessary to subsistence,
the necessaries of life—
with due care or attention.
adv. fitly,

, ,^, ,^,
against an enemy, E. 5. 1. 2.

passions,
a fortress to strengthen the
a fortress
against the passions, see Hemster. on Luc.
1. 62. ov, o, the raising forts
on the confines of an enemy, Thuc. 1. 122.
^,
sync, for

7. 52.
sufficient,
adequate,
fit.

adv. diligently, earnestly, Theo.

1
sue, cultivate, study
seek a thing as necessary, pur-

II.

imitate, affect,
a. 142.

He-
by

, ,
— fortification, E. 5. 2. 1.

bour, Dem. 254.

finishing
f. ,
the raising a
wall opposite to the windows of a neigh-

I bring to an end, put a


hand upon, complete

— pay tri-
rod. 4. 170.
trained, instituted, A. 6. 4.




I

, a mode
orcourseoflife education— an established
usage institution, discipline, Hipp. 261.

-,
am

,
practised,

&,
bute, Herod. 5. 49. I bring
myself to an end, conclude, finish, Gal. 3.
3. to be fulfilled in, to be in-
A. J. 1.

cause to melt, pour melted wax


over, Herod.
I
7. 239. ,.,
co-

,.
flicted upon, to pay for myself the debt due
to old age, i. e. endure its infirmities,
4. 8. 8.— to endure, 1 Pet. 5. 9.
33, he closed himself
in death, he finished all by submitting to
-. , vered with something melted over, so as
to have the appearance of what is real or
natural, pretended, affected, Meleager, 62.
see Plut. 2. 65.
I observe, wait for, E. 2. 2. 10.
,
493

,
, ,
.<,
upon ,
,

—forput
f.
) the watch
or
— —

, ,for, Plat. 8. 131.


I put, lay
a load on the shoiddei'S.
they impose, Mat. 23.
— —

-
. —

over, 0. 15.
leag. 79.
ov,

I
1.— spread

rapid, voluble, Luc.


wheel about, drive over.

as a flame,
—— —

1. 465.
494
Me-

, , , - ,,
4.
— put a name upon, superadd— put in the adv. lightly, on the surface, ra-

,, —
handt deliver put stripes upon, inflict,
-
pidly, concisely, II. y. 213.

,
rub upon, wear down, consume,

,
Acts 16. 23. 6ia I

for puts upon, imposes, Od. Nub. 242. Luc. 1. 1 14.— tease, harass, crush

, , ,,
S. 245.
,
, imperat. of

,
upon, give to, II. a. 509.
put the
for
victory
fut. of

ov,
friction, collision.
hacknied, cunning, Ajax, 103.
I continue the office of a

. ,, ,- ,,
I will superadd, II. -. 796. aor. 1. trierarch beyond the period fixed by the
he put upon, . 111. f° r law, Dem. 1212. 27. ,

, ,, ,
replaced upon, Od. /. 314. aor. 2. the continuance of the office of trierarch,
for instead of its being filled by a successor.
we placed upon, Od. y. 179. optat. ov, containing a whole and a third

ye might place upon, part more, Plut. 7. 530. the third of a —


faire, for
.

,
add, Od. .
62. I place myself capital placed at interest, 3. 9.

,
upon, assail, rise against, oppose, S. 3. 1 2.
— -put myself om a ivorlc, apply to, under- commit —
I turn, point, refer to—in-
give way to, succumb, II.

,
trust,
take—impose, command, Herod. . I turn my-

^,
111. 79. sc.

,
1.
Acharn. 597.
I also pluck, commit myself to, aor. 2. m.

-
self,

, ,
I put a value upon, put an my mind turned, prompted,

,,
additional price, Dem. 918. 22. impose a

,,

,
reprove, rebuke, Luke 23. 40.
— me, Od. t. 12. p. pass. 6
he who has the

, ,
fine tnt- city intrusted
, ,
reproof, rebuke, Polyb. 6. to him. perf. pass,

,
tj, Ion. for

,
13. 5.

, , a censor, avenger been intrusted,


to
II.
whom
. 25.
the people have
-
, », , ,
inspector, Prom. Polyb. 12. 12.4.— consign, give, .
17. I intrust, II. 421.
,
sorious.
disposed to censure, cen- Apoll. 1. 351.
ov, intrusted, permitted -
,
-
,
penalty, punishment,
fine, a, ov, to be intrusted or allowed,
$,
vj,


,,
S. Elect. 921. Herod.

,
Opp. to vindication, 9. 59.
privilege, Dem. 230. 10. , , a guardian— praefect
price, fee, penalty, Polyb. 5. 54. 11. a,intrusted to a person as a
ov,

, 6, , a man of rank or authority, guardian, Herod. 4. 147.

,
opp. to

-,
, ,
stored to honour, E. 2. 2. 6.

,
,
Plut. 5. 426.
I bring forth in addition
——
Ranae, 701. promoted, re-
honourable,

bring — 12. 8. —
,
qualified to become a
guardian, superintendant or bailiff, 0. 12. 3.
I superintend as a guardian, O.
rule, controul, Equit. 211.

,
, ,.
,,
forth one upon another— bear another.
near bringing forth, ready to litter.

,
ov, at the breast, an infant,
, guardianship,
commission, Acts 26. 1 2. decision, Thuc.
5. 31.

,

, . ,
I endure, imperat. ac- f. aor. 2.
quiesce in, II. r. 220. — f. I fall upon, fall
ijc, the rising of the sun or stars, in with, E. 7. 4. 26. —
meet a friend sur- —

,
Polyb. 1. 37. 4.— injunction,

, , , , -
assume additional courage, I

buckle up endure, forbear, Od. . 238.
prise, encounter an enemy—fall in with the
thing desired or sought, find, 2. 2. 2.
obtain, reach, Heb. 6. 15. aor. 2. part,
.

, ,
, a

,
ov, abridged ov, an one as
adjectively, such

,
short by-path, abridgement, epitome. a person may meet with, ordinary,
easily
ov, stretched, laborious, Lnc. 2.64 1 common — accidental, accustomed to do,
, .
, , a rope by which the sail-yard

,
was lashed to the mast, Od.

,
423..
9. 3.
, , -, one who
c. obtains

\, ,
— — unerring,
^, ,
shoot at, II. y. 79. aim at,
reproach, calumniate, Luc. 3. 141.
his end, successful,
§ 22. ij, ,
Long. §
success, felicity,
15.

, ,,
f. mix with tragic fable, Polyb. 5. 14. 11. adv. aptly,

,,
Luc. 2. 518. exaggerate, Plut. 5. 480.


run upon, assail, invade, II. |. 421.
strike upon, II. v. 409. aor. 2.
opportunely, happily, Plut. 8. 685.

tomb — tufted,
ov, placed on a
scil. lark, Theo. 7. 23.
they ran upon, Theo. 25. 70. run over a — render blind, Plut. 6. 345.
subject, has been skimmed smoke with, Lvsist. 221.
,
,
495
,
f.
scoff, taunt,

,
——

,
,, , -,
Polyb.
clean, brighten, Apoll. 4. 662.
I show upon,
5.~-

3. 80.

display,
— —

bespatter, Apoll.
over and above fearful, timid.
I put on red, mix with red.
,
1. 481.
——
496

,
exhibit, have, Polyb. 24. 5.
,,
.
I
6. 3. 6.

preeminent,
,
show myself upon, appear above,

, ,
,
appearing above others,

Thuc. 2. 43, of illustrious men the


whole earth is the tomb
-
,
Thuc.

aor.
or
.
upon
1.
f.

81.
— -,
— bring goods
I go to, frequent, invade,
— come upon as

troduce, cause, Plut. 8. 646.



Ion.
f.

a city, import, in-

upon an enemy, assail with arms, II.


to
bring arms
132.
diseases do.


I bring to

.
appearance — appearance
of day, light, — bring an accusation upon, charge with,
— —
-
splendour, majesty, 2 Thess. 2. 8. ap- allege against, Acts 25. 18. bring affliction
»,
,
pearance of one that was absent, advent,
manifestation, 2 Tim. 4. 1. surface, figure,
upon, visit with. 6

,
3. 5, he who infiieteth punishment,

,
Rom.

,
,
side, Polyb. 4. 70. 9.— celebrity, 6. 43. 7. Thuc. 8. 83, supplying the de-

,
adv. manifestly, visibly. sires —bring one thing upon another, add,
ov, appearing among the living. subjoin, Phil. 1. 16. I bring
,
,
, ,
11. 7. — form
display, ostentation, Polyb. 32.
or appearance, 11. 27.
at a stall, of a manger,
I throw upon,
light
. ,,
8.
myself upon, run upon,
lyb. 12.— inveigh, Herod.
16. 3.
dash against— threaten, Polyb. 2.
bring in for myself, Luc. 1. 363.
assail, attack,
8.
23. 7.
61.
Po-

, ,
shine upon, Ephes. the bringing upon, attack, Po-

,
illumine, will

,
5. 14.— display, H.
Apoll. 444.
ov, to be fled to, rather

to be avoided, Arist. Ethic. . 14.


I ascribe to or signalise with an
- lyb. 3. 53.—'inference
6. 31.—influx, Plut". 6. 387.

contribution, Thuc.

ov, bearing towards, Thuc. 3. 74.


bearing in the womb, pregnant, K. 7. 2.

5 ?,
,
gods,
,
illustrious name, inscribe on a work the

,
,
— divulge,,
name of another, Luc. 1. 24.

i.
he acts inscribing the
imputing his actions to the gods
e.
promulgate, he
conducive, most favourable,
Choeph. 809.— prone, Plut. 8. 811.
I bring, carry, upon,
Pax, 224.— throw earth upon, cover with
A. 3. 5. 6. that
throw sto7ies

,
-

,
soil,

,, ,
&, . , ,
augured ill, boded evil, Herod. 3. 124.

,
evil-boding, Thuc. 7. 75.
assent to, Plut. 9. 266.~promise,
Iphig. A. 130. But for Markland
which is brought on table after meat,
dainty, dessert, Herod. 1. 133.

,, supply fodder for, H. Merc. 105.


aor. 2. I signify, inti-

,
,
— admonish, II.». 127.—
would read mate
-
,

, ,
I utter at or in consequence,
announce, Choeph. 454. express myself
cite a proverb, Luc. 2. 31.
,
6, sj, liable to be envied, en-
viable, distinguished, Hec. 1185.

§

odious, —
I bethink myself, consider, deliberate,

m. that they might comprehend, II.


stop up bar against,
I

shut up, secure myself,
aor. 1. optat.
/3.

fortify.
282.

,
hateful. ~kmv stop my Luc. 2. 484.
ears,
Herod. with

,
4. ov, guarded, laid at the necJc

,
205, very severepunishmentsbecomeodious
to men from the gods, i. e. the gods teach
a guarded hand, Orest. 1575.
6, , wise in consequence cf

cise
vov, ,-, ,
-
men to hate cruelty by the loathsome dis-
eases they often entail on those who exer-
it, compare Acts
enviableness, hatred
12. 23.—
adv.
experience or reflection, prudent, sagacious,
Od. y. 128.

22. —
,, , prudence,
discernment— sedateness of mind, Od. r.
quickness of perception, . 437.

, ,,
invidiously, maliciously, I have my mind on an object,

, ,
they regarded with envy, understand correctly, perceive clearly, am

, ,,, ,
6,
,,
to be maliciously regarded, Thuc. 1. 75.
look upon with envy or hatred,
bear malice to, Od. . 148.
spit upon
prudent or discerning, Od. . 385.
ov, in tribes, Ion. 1577.
,
a cluster of grapes lying

,
~.

,
Dor. over another, Ranas, 92. or the foliage
mutter, part, for Theo. 2. 62. which covers the grapes, fir. the —
cheerfully labour, love,
I gleaningof grapes, grapes.
am grafted upon, Plut. 6. 559.—
or have leisure for the chase, O. 5. 5.

,, I put a bndle in the mouth,


they were silenced, Luc. 3. 340.
- embrace, Polyb. 12. 11.
grow upon, abound, 2 Mace. 4. 50.—
6.—,
^,
unless this be the <plwp. pass, of
set on fire, burn, II. |S. 455.
,. fasten upon, cling to, Plut. 6. 19.
Plut. 8. 774.
impugn, —
, ——
407

,, , , ,
,, , — ——
I

graft upon, plant in, Pax, 167.


cry loudly against, inveigh,

— —

II. .
G54. has shed itself
over, has overspread, sc. the snow.
— —
498

,
1
,

,
Long. § 3.— shout, Acts 12. 22. infusion, libation, Plut. 5. 389.

.
4.
,
,
,
at,

,, \,
acclamation, Plut.

, I dawn, Luke 23. 54.


4. 8; 3.
shouting
713.
ov, on the earth, yet among the

living, II. a. 266.

,,
I scoff at, deride.

,
f.

,
f. avo>, p. m. I gape for, f. I soften, melt by applying
pant after, Luc. 1. 349. heat, Luc. 2. 228.

,
hail upon, shower upon.
pour ov, irascible, bitter, Herod. 4. 58.

,
, , ;
cased in brass, plated with
steel, Herod. 4. 200.
ov,
overlay
with brass — cast brass upon, Nubes, 421.

,, I rejoice at or in, Ajax, 136.


a sport, laughing-stock.
dance at, dance with, 2. 9. 5.
I lead the chorus, am leader or
chief of the chorus. It was the duty of the
to supply the expenses necessary to
the tvhole : hence this verb came to signify I

,
,
,
Prom.

,
,, ,.
? ,
158.
Plut. 9. 234.

,
ov,

, gratifying,
f. ,,
to be rejoiced in, delightful,
— incurring ridicule, ridiculous,

Prom. 160.
relax, loosen, Polyb. 34. 3.
delighting in evil, Arist.
— malignant, Meleag. 82.
furnish liberally,
dantly supplied, Col. 2. 19.
/,
abun-

2 Pet. 1. 15,
by means of your faith supply virtue, i. e.
" let faith preside in your hearts and in
your assemblies, and let it supply all the

,
Ethic, 7. moral virtues as a chorus following with
, malevolence, Plut. 6. 339. harmony in its train."
,—,

, , ,, ,
I favour by lending, I lend the leading or supplying
. —
(>,
to, 6. 12.
for
act agreeably to, gratify.
do thou
of the chorus the supplying the body, lia
Ephes. 4. 16,
moreover
, or
oblige,
ov, c.
Acharn. 884."

^, through every joint of the supply, through


every joint which supplies.

,
,,
^,
agreeable, obliging, gracious, Septem, 916. f. imp. I desire a

,
,
.
suavity, urbanity thing inconsequence of being used to it, long
adv. agreeably, in a manner to ingratiate, for, covet— seize as a prey, II. .

,
356.
4.
,, - court as an object of love, sue for, Od. . 50.

. )\,
caco super. Aves, 68. see note, — inf. I put myself
render myself dirty, Eccles. 636. upon a thing with a desire to have it,
,,, —

,,,
:, up to the lips, half full, master, Thuc. 1.68. use over and above,
f. m
a, I lay my hands upon, abuse, burden, 1. 41. ; (Ion.

hold my hands against, oppose, at- Herod.

,,
seize for
tack, .5. 4. 20.— take in hand, under- 3. 99, women who mostly used, who mostly

,
take, attempt, Luke 1. 1. depended upon, or were mostly related to.
—,
an attempt pursuit, K. 1 3. 1 3. ar- — neigh at, snort, Apoll. 3. 1257.

",
, ,
tifice ij, conspi-
assault, cough at.

,
racy, Herod. 8. 132. — reasoning, Polyb. 12. expectorate thy words, utter

,
8.

8.

, ,
4.— attempt, Thuc.

,
, , one who attempts every
461. an adventurer
1. 70.
thing, Plut.
to
ov,
with a deep hoarse voice, Luc. 2. 195.
f. ma, I put ointment upon, Od.

179.— spread clay upon, John 9. 6.


.

,
be undertaken it is

. necessary

, —.
ov, anointed, besmeared.

,
,
to attempt, must endeavour, 3. 6. 14. ov, gilded, 3. 10. 11.
disposed to seize, rapacious. f. I put colour upon,
,,

,,
.
,
the fruit of one's hands, varnish, Luc. 3. 195. stain, Plut. 6. 555.

- ,
pay, wages, effect, Antig. 831.
I vote, sanction by holding

,,
sac, varnish, stain, Plut. 7. 503.
f. I raise a heap upon, build

,, (>,,
up the hand, ratify, Luc. 1. 483.— a tomb a mound.

«^suffrage ratification, Dem. 706. I move to, advance, A. 1. 2. 17.

,
7.

,,, , ^, f.
the assemblies in which
the people gave their votes, 1330. 17.
aor.
pour upon, pour oil upon a
I
1. — f.
— retreat, E.

], or
ov,
2. 4. 24. —concede.
peculiar to a place, indigenous.
the natives, ',

customs or institu-

,, ,
wound, dress, Luke 10. 24.— pour a tomb tions of one's country.

upon, raise pour arrows upon, shower
pour sleep or the air upon, shed, breathe,
feeling shame at, despising the manners of
his own country, Pyth. 3. 38.
infuse— pour leaves upon the ground, strew adv. like one's country.
— shed upon, I pour myself frequent, prevail, Luc. 1. 76.
upon, rush upon, / ' for <~ play a tune upon sing to.
2

,
4D9
— — —

,
—I

.
— —— —
.
500
3.— swear

,
I touch the surface, touch a sub- protest solemnly, 6. 4.

,
ject, lightly explain, Polyb. 2. 1. 4. reach, — by, Theogn. 1195.

isthm. 4. 17. taste slightly, am superfi- embossed, on the boss or

,
ov,

-, - , ,
informed, Od. B. 547. navel, 267.
]/,
cially

-,
II. y.

,
e»f, y, the touching upon. reproach, stigmatise,Phocyl. 212.
drop upon, besprinkle. ov, scandalous, Luc. 1. 269.
I superadd falsehoods to the adv. ignominiously, basely.

, , ,-,
truth, colour with falsehood, exaggerate. I give an additional name, name
Luc. 2. 550, on account of or from, Polyb. 1 . 29. 2.
that you might falsify many things on them, I assume to myself a name,
add to them many falsehoods. am Rom. 17.— am

, . call myself, called, 2.


I put to the vote, 1. 1. 18. described, deemed, O. 6. 17.

, , -, ,
—superadd
tion, A. 7. 3. 6.
own
-,
my own
vote, confirm, E.

,
vote, confirm, sanc-

1. 1.
deserving of censure, repre-
ov,
I give my
24.

.
a feast called by hisname,S.Elect.286.
I sharpen, accelerate, 2 Mace. 9. 7.
look to, dread, Od. f. 146.
roast upon, Od. . 363.
— ob-

, ,, , , ,, -
inspect
-^,
hensible, oy, reprehension, Ion.

,
14.7. 1

-, rattle, ring upon, Call. 3. 245.


cool by blowing upon, refresh.
r,g, a shelter, refuge, Apoll. 4. 1641.
serve, 1 Pet. 2.
vour, regard, Olym. 7. 19.
12.

inspection, contemplation, Plut. 7. 664.


—look
,
upon with
,
fa-

,,
, , , , ,,,
,
or after, jj
ov, part, of

lowing, Acts 7. 26.


sc.
coming upon
the day fol-

rising, K. 4. 6.
eight and a half, Plut. 10. 225.
,,
or
vey, visit, Od. v\. 234.
I look ovei> sur-
ov,

a spectator, eye-witness, Septem,


639.— superintendant oi the in-

,
,
,
, ,
which he
,
-,
,, Icn. for
for a journey, Herod. 4. 203.

,
furnish with provisions, Herod. 9. 99.
stink, rot,

,
ov,
provisions

Exod. 7. 18.
one who dwells
I

in a city of
not a native, sojourner.
is

. —
spectors of the mysteries, the initiated.

-, ov, contemplative, Plut. 7. 503.


I look upon, for
they regard, Herod. 1. 124. inspect.
celebrate orgies, Anacr. 32.
am enraged at, 2 Mace. 7. 33.

,, ,
I dwell, sojourn in, 6. 2. 5. oc- stretch myself to, II. . 336.
cupy, Lye. 926. ov, a villa, cottage.

sing aloud, shout, Agam. 1128.
,
, ,
I build upon, A. 3. 4. 6. erect or I utter

,
f.

,
,
ing up
-,
a fortress against, repair, E. 6. 5. 12.
up in knowledge, edify, Col. 2. 7.

, , —
,
accumulation, Long. § 39. 3.
,
build

the build-

'^distribution, arrangement,
Long. § 11. 2. But the true reading here
,
— with a loud voice, proclaim, Eur. Elect. 142.

,,
I blockade, Herod. 8. 81.

, —
imp.
rise upon, instigate, U. o. 613.
cause to

I raise myself against, rush upon, -. 689.

I rush upon assail— fly to —

,, , ,, ,
^,
f.

perhaps is amplification. assist, aid, II. . 793. spring upon, mount


— overwhelm,
,,
relieve, pity, Philoct. Ii358.
, . II. 232.

,
have pity upon, CEd. T. 1319. f. aor. 1. p. m.
-,,,— — bring upon
/, imp. f. I cause to rise, raise against

, ,
I go to, frequent the loom, II. a. 31. — stir up— I raise myself, rise

, — .
i. e. work at go to a persoji, go among, against, attack, II. 324. ^they

,,, ,

Od. a. 143. go to a banquet, visit, ho-
nour, Olym. 3. 72.— go upon an enemy, in-
rose up to serve, y. 471. imp.
Od.
— up
for rose against, rose up rise

,, -. , —
vade, assail go on board, mount, embark. to watch— spring up as the wind, Od. y. 176.

of
seek, Plut. 8. 668.
Ion. for
II. .
3. plur. plup.
340, they assailed ,, , ,
a word—a thing, II. a.
(fr.
I 7. 327.
dance upon, Plut.
a thing spoken,
or
in
,)105.— words

,
drive aship against,run aground, measure, poetry, or epic poetry oracle as
Acts 27. 41.— force ashore, Thuc. 4. 26. composed in verse, Herod. 1.13. It is re-

,
,
for
,
, ,
Long. 3, read
driving insensibly, drifting,
shout at, howl, Equit. 613.
I
, dundantly used with a verb of the same na-
ture, so to speak a word, so
to speak, if I may so say, Polyb. 1. 1. 2.

, , -,
drench with rain, Agath. 71. yvha, he spoke a word, he

, ,
,
a heavy rain, Plut. 9. 549.
f. ,
I swear in addi- ,
spoke or expressed himself, II. a. 543.
scil. ,
thus to speak in one

,
tion, confirm by an oath, word, to speak briefly, Orest. 1.
and moan over, Phcen. 1045.
I will
for
take a solemn oath,
this for
II. a. 233. f. , quicken, I
50]
^ ,
hasten myself,

,,
— —

of ourselves (i. e. unasked by him) hasten


let us

-, ,
,
, . avenues of the seven walls,
i. e. the seven gates, Septem, 284.

,
h{)2

,
his departure, Od. .

', , .
31. with seven strings, Alccst. 447.
by the tail. Wolves, in crossing
a stream, in order to stem the current, seize

., . ,
,
adv. into seven parts, in seven ways,
Od. . 434.
, ,
,
each other by the tail, al. 418.

,
seven

,
ov, in the heavens, heavenly, ce-
lestial, 1 Cor. 15. 48.
,
,
, ,
years old, of seven years, Luc. 1.514.

.
ov, having seven voices, echo.

,
breathing favourably upon, pro- ov, Ion. for
,
well watered,
sperous breeze, Trach. 971.

f. ,,
swell the sails, Luc. 3. 197.
, blow upon
f.

prosperously, direct as with the wind, Andr.


^.
, ,
Herod.

f.
4. 198. fr.

',
, dim. of
a little verse.
follow an object, am busy
about, mind, II. o. 555.
I
handle, . 321. —

,610.— drive before thewind, sail with speed,


Thesm. 1241. Polyb.

seated,
,
, 2. 10. 6.
capable of riding firmly7, well-
Hipp. 214, mounted
,
, ',,,',
am occupied about another, accompany,
II. . 516.
I follow, attend upon, obey, Od. y.
363. c. d. imp. she accompanied, 11.

,
,
,
on madness, madly soaring,
mounted on
a saddle,
ships,

ride,
carried upon, Plut. 8. 231.
, ()
..
II.
embarked, Pers. 52.
1 2. 9.
830. soar aloft, am

, ,
,
y. 447.
644. f.
Od. .
287.
for

portion, II. . 415.


-/,
prehend, approve, O. 14. 13.
he went with, v.
I will follow, attend thee,
will attend, will be the

I follow, cling to, imp. 6 «



follow a speaker, com-

-
,,
restraint, delay, suspen-
sion, Polyb. 38. 2. 3. positions of the other at the same time followed,

,,,
,
the stars, Plut. 1. 100.
water with pipes, shed upon.
-,
U. .
472.
or sit as a bird on her eggs,

,
,
-,
the bird of inspection, fr.
an owl, the emblem of wisdom, upupa.
Theo. 5. 135.— a lapwing.
ov. capable of being inspected,
,
, ,, )
,
cluck, I hide, Aves, 267.
ov, painful, extorted by pain.

to, Hec. 1272.


,
harmonizing with, conformable

,

sympathizing with.

/, an enchanter.

,
discernible, (Ed. T. 1335. one (for

,,
on whom men fixed their eyes, an object ,

,
n, for an appendage or

.,
of scorn, a laughing-stock, II. y. 42.

', seven
prospect, Herod. 1. 64.
ov, composed of
.
addition to an ode a charm, incantation,
2. 6. 11.— a cure by means of charms,
Ajax, 583. soothing words.
,
, . -
,
seven skins, impenetrable, II. >j. 220. I push against, propel.

,, ov, with seven tongues or


f.

ov, in the arms, , ,.


,, , . —

,
strings, Nem. 5. 43. placed on the shoulder

,
, for seven years, Od. y. 205. o^/,adv.on the shoulders, Apoll. 1.735.
/-,

,
seventeen. seven times. iloc, , top of the shoulder, At. 3.

^,
, .
Pyth.
,2.,
,
, seven thousand.
ov, containing seven beds. Khiv/\.
at, seven hundred, septingenti.

129.
ov, sounding with seven strings,

fr.
10. 13. —
the arm next the shoulder, Call.
4. 143. a garment worn over the shoulders.
I bear on my shoulders.

,
bound by an oath, Trach. 1204.
a, ov, named on ac-

,,,
,
'^,
fr.

, , ov, having seven armed chiefs,


(Ed. C. 1370.
ov, on seven hills, scil. Rome.

.
count of, deriving a name from.
they called her Alcy-
one, so named from Alcyon, II. /. 558.
'

,
born in the seventh Od. \. 54, her

)
month, of seven months, name is Arete so called, alluding to /,
-

, , , , ov, having seven threads, with


seven strings, Luc. 1. 364.

.
,seven feet long, I!, o. 729.
,,
virtue,

fr.
Pyth. 1 . 58, a city so called
(scil.

from iEtria,

,
, .,
-,
,,
,
ov, having seven recesses, full of
caverns, Call.

,
, ,
4. 65.
sevenfold.
having seven gates, Thebes.
ov, having seven towers.
ov, having seven towers furnished
with armed men, Eur. Supp. 1221.
ov, having seven mouths, seven-
mouthed gates, Eur. Supp. 401.
,
,

,,
a name derived from some-
thing else, denomination, Call. 3. 205.
keep my eye upon, mark out.
'^aspect, countenance, 3. Supp. 548.
an attendant, Lye. 1174.
jj, pi.
placed on each side of the prow to guard it
from the beaks of the enemy, Thuc. 7. 62.
give additional relief, I succour,
pieces of wood

'2 2
503

,aid,

;,
CEd. C. 454.
—— — — ——

.
supply, Philoct. 278.
11. 1 3.— ,, ——

| (I'/drn,
,,

, Minerva

as
the working of, labour, em-
worker.
501

,,,
EPA,
fr. ground
,
ov, useful to, profitable.

,
the earth in a cultivated
Dor. sgaafc, to the
state,
ployment, Ktt. 2. 7. 7. Acts 19. 25.— cul-
tivation of the ground— the making of rai-
ment, O. 7. 21. —
the produce of labour,
,-
earth, on the ground, II.

.
Od. a. 226.
,


1 56.

,
.
6, (what is taken out of the ground,

, ,
ore, money, and hence earn) contribution,
7. 1. 7.— the quota or share which each

' , -,
man pays to defray the expenses of a com-
mon meal an entertainment so defrayed,
gain, profit, At. 3. 10. 1. loc
stow labour, give heed, use thy endeavour,
Luke 12. 58.

sub.
ov,

therefore open for riding,


fit

— ~/, , a workman,
be-

for cultivation,
cultivated plains
.
6,
1. 4. 16.
and

la-

— mechanic — husbandman, O.
Long. 40, sublimity in composition is the
contribution of a multitude,
fects of many particulars
the joint ef-

is

debt, Polyb. 38.


-,
bourer
worked
to be worked, that be done.
^-,
necessary
must
a, ov,
5. 1 5.

3. 10.— .•, f. ,,
I pay my quota or

,, -r.Qiov, ,,a place to work in, a work-


share, I contribute, Long. 20.

self, Luc. 2. 296.

,,, ,
-, ,
I receive a contribution, earn, enrich my-
o, one who

clubs with others for an entertainment, a


club-companion,
, ... 2.— a contributor.
,
-,
,
house
4. 17,
— factory.
a factory or work-shop of war.
,
a shopman, mechanic.
yj, ov, disposed to work,

,
6, a workman
active.
laborious, — 1.
-r^iov, .

.
3.

, ],-/, f.

, ,
for, aor. 1. m.

^,
,
I love, desire earnestly, long
I became

moured of, was captivated with, II. |. 317.


ena-

helusted after,
6.

1. 8.
15.
,
a working ox.
workmanship), labour.
n, ov, fit for working, robust,
Luc.
adv. laboriously.

,
,
Pyth. 2. 50. Od.

,
, ,
,.
,.
,
long for, imp.

,
Pyth. 3. 34. optat.

, ,
237. . -,,
longed for, pined after,

yi, ov, lovely for its soil, Od. «. .18.

loving song, jolly, Olym. 14. 21.


loving money.
,
delighting in fine hair,
proud and comely, Pyth. 4. 242.
I

— lovely

,
at work,
Ion.
Dor.
fit

verns two accusatives,


q,
for cultivation, arable land.

iron, hard-working, Apoll. 2. 374.

effective, Philoct. 97.


I work, do, cause. It go-
(for

^ *,,
p. in. whatever evils, all the evils, thou
,
hard-working, Herod.

.
a worker on

)-
5. 13.

,
a, ov, c. lovely in hast done me. he who

mind, amiable lovely inform, charming. does much, II. . 320. plup. he
-, , 6, a lover, A. 2. 1 3. caused, did, Od. . 693.—perform, achieve


,—
m, ou, lovely
longed for, Od.
pleasant, II.
300. .
570.

y\, ov, exciting love or desire, engaging


. draw a work round, inclose, shut in pri-
son, Herod. 3. 136.—keep off by work,

, imp. pass. ,^
,,
fence, drive away, for


,
lovely light, bright, serene, Olym. 10. 91.
lovely modesty, amiable, Pyth. 9. 20.

, ,, ^/,
chaste, Isthm. 8. 94.
for, II. ?. 550.
,contr.
long, pine

, one of the Muses.


, he departed
imp.
rites, II.
,"
.
306.
,,
4. 164, he was driven away,
willingly.

II.
we
380, for
who did me many evils, imperat. sg
performed, offered
.
f. , I for $, do as you like, . 29.
work — work the ground, cultivate, 3. 2. . 7,, do as you please, part. doing, },
12.— labour, opp. to 2 Thess. 3. 10. acting, Nem. 3. 33.— commit, perpetrate,
— work in business, traffic, trade with, Mat.
25. 16. —
work the sea, navigate, plough, , ,. ,
Herod.

,
1. 137.
by transp. work, do,

, , , ,,
f. I
Rev. 18. 17. Hes. . 440.— work out bread cause, II. 206. imp. did, offered,
for myself, produce, procure by working, . 400. aor. who caused, Od. . 72.
1.

,,
John 6. 27. work iniquity, do, practise a deed, Herod. 5. 77. \\ork,
— work miracles, perform —work statues, achievement, Isthm. 1. 36. an
make— work a crime, perpetrate, IT. 5. 15. inclosure, fence, confinement, Antig. 860.
— work
5. a person, cause,
evil to
generate, effect, O. 12. 20.
he who works, a labourer,
6

labour. The perfect has sometimes a pass.


effect

,,
success, effect
deed, fact, opp. to
a thing, —
1.4. 25.

a thing done, work, II. a. 294.

event, A. 3. 3.
9.— operation, emotion of the soul, Ax. 3.
.

, active,
he who has done these
&', ,
,
sense, see Aw. 3. 10. 9. In Ajax, 22, it is

things.
so. iyi, if it

a tool, implement.
be
10. 8. —
profession, employment
activity— -office, duty,
labour,
the works
of husbandry, the cultivated fields, K. 3. 3.
— adjeclivcly, tfi, there is need,
,—
— —— —
005
, ,
,
,, . 50G

,,
,,
sc.
whatever are the works of
strength, whatever need strength
,
ov, 6,
difficult.
it is difficult, .
one who gives out work, an

1. 1.5.
imp.

, ,
, made of wool, woollen,
contentious, Theo. 15. 50.
f.

for
/,
I cut down, cut to pieces,
,,—
he pulled down, de-
.

^, ,
employer, molished, II. o. 361. fall down, aor. 2.
IT. 8. 2. 4. loa.
ov, o, one who receives work to ^, he fell, tumbled, e. 47. subj.

',
do, an undertaker, a labourer, Plut. 4. 660. for Sf>my? he may fall, plup. pass,

, , ,
,

f. \,
I undertake a work, con- for Att. was fallen or

;,
tract for, Att. 3. 1.2. make gain of.
,
thrown into ruins.
, a fragment,
/, ,
,
, , , jj, undertaking, earning.

ov, hard-labouring, a mechanic.


,c.

,, ,
laborious, difficult.
— ov,
among heaps
of the dead, hence ripa, a broken rock.
A]ax,308,
ruins, Pers. 425.

-,,
,
the price of work, wages. ov, ready to fall, tumbling, Ipfaig.

,-,
s ,
grave, erebus, hades—
darkness of the grave, the
to erebus
from erebus, Orest. 174. "2iy.
v\, ov, pitchy dark, 11. e. 864.

ov, 6, vetches of a black colour, II.


T. 48.

eating,
f.

with the teeth,


776.
II.
,
one who demolishes
a wall, subverter, Septem, 883.

.
tear
i.
down,
e. eat,

tear down leaves from
crop,
I bruise, grind

^,
v. 589. chick-pease, Philodem. 30. a tree as to fall in showers, cover, crown

, ,
,
.90

I grope in erebus, explore the with garlands, Pyth. 4. 427. the sense of

,
, ,
abyss below, Nubes, 1 92.

, , ,,
,,
, , of erebus, dark like erebus.
dark-faced, lowering,
imp. for
. 375.— dark
,,
from which
black,
the grave, Od.
imp.
earth,
II. .
Damm,
167.
827. derives
— lowering,
I
a. 106.
interrogate,
II.
it.

, ,. ),
I ask,

— harass,
,.
interrogate,
f.

,,
I irritate,
, ,
,
,
,
harass an enemy, Polyb. 1. 19.
,
II.

Dor.
provoke
awake the muse, Theo. 21.21.

,
encounter.
.

formidable
for
145.


Od. . 305.

stir


up, II. a. 32.
ask —

my lips only,
A.
inquire, consult,
I

Att.
speak with

,
trifle, cavil,

oars, ply, ply threats, Ajax, 251


wings, fly. inf.
f.
my
3. 1. 6.

taunt,
I
lips,

row, urge with

for
.

urge with
to
i. e. with

. ,
to contend with in boxing, 22. 2.— pro- row, II. /. 361. imp. for they
,
voke to good, stimulate, 2 Cor. 9. 2. alarm,
Prom. 181.
,, , ,
, , rowed, Od. 1. 490.

/
serting

,
,
fr. and by in-

,- '- ,
-, , ,
f.Qiuiu provocation, , rowing, Od. . 78.
excitement, Nub. 312.

, ,
, a rower,

,
irritation, ov, II. a. 142.

,
^/», ), aor.
)
, ,
f.

or
pass,

by excluding
3. plur.
— obs. 1.

p. pass,

Ion. for
lean upon, press against
I
and the Attic reuup.

prop,
(for


- ,),
, ,
the

ing,
full

II.
ov,
fit

a. 435.
for rowing,
number of rowers,

wish the
ov,

?,
Plut. 3. 757.
, an oar—row-
ply with oars.
I
(

,
1.


,
, ,, ,
fix

support stick in.

an anchor
I am supported,
or support myself, lean upon, II. |. 88. aor.
he lay leaning upon, II. y. 145.
in the
upon, apply, direct, Theo. 21. 62. press
ground— fix the

mind
pine had not furnished their hands with
oars, Med.
f.

f.
4.


aor. 2.
for



I

,
belch, vomit vomit out flames, Pyth. 1.
against an adversary, assail

,,
press against
my bosom, embrace, Eccles. 612. aor. 1. m.
he supported himself, II. e. 309.
plup. pass, ^-, for

was forced
, , ^, ,
40. vomh forth waves, Od. /. 374. vomit
forth a loud cry, bellow,
f.

cause to become red, I colour, stain with


II. v.

aor.

475.—,
404.
1.

, , ,
through, 436.. were supported blood, II. . 484. Apoll. 4.
with pillars of brass, plated with brass, or

,, , , ,
I redden, am red, «. 400.

,, , —

,,
strengthened with plates of brass, Od. >?. 86. redness blush.

, , ,/
a prop, pillar the pillar ruddy, red, Apoll. 1. 724.
of a state, i.e. its principal support and or- f. I trace by the scent, inves-
nament, Olym. 2. 12. Luc. 1. 162. tigate, U. . 321.— search narrowly, John
,, f. |», aor. .
break, split, 11. . 295.— cause to break,
for I 5. 39.
malefactors, . 1. 2. 12.
to hunt out

split, rend, v. 441. —


split the ground, plow, = to be inquired into, it
Hes. a. 287.
,, a piece of wood or
,
is

.
necessary to scrutinize, must examine,
ifuzYi, or
splinter —
bruised or pounded
55,

the sweet broom, heath, this being


dissolve the stone. , 8. 39.

, search, scrutiny, investigation.


f. xj /, I make dark, (fr. ?*£?)— cover
— — — —
50/
with a roof, II. . 450. cover with gar-
lands, crown, shade, Olym. 13. 45. cover


,
I. pass. s£Jjt£#£p, for

,,
strained themselves,
e r

.
99.
,, 508
they re-
Ion.

,
,
with skulls, hang, Isthm. 4. 9:5. imp.
for

, , ,
aor.

so;.\l/ic,

', ,
-»,

.
1 . -, for
ed or covered in with a roof.
,,
a covering, Plut. 5. 181.
,
crowned, shaded, Olym. 1. 110.

6, a king of Athens, said to


Od. -. 1 93, 1 roof-
for restrained, 189.
EPI, an inseparable particle augmenting the

,, — ,, ,
meaning of the word, very, greatly.
high-necked horse, spirited.
6
ing, raging lions, Isthm. 4. 78.
, &,, , bellowing— loud-
loudly roar-

,
have been born of the earth, and brought

, , ,
up by Minerva
terity of Erechtheus, the Athenians.
(fr.
the pos-

by inserting u) I break,
burst, waste, Od. e. 83. -fm, shat-
,, roaring, Hes.

or deep
, 832. Antip. Sid. 11.

ov,
6.

, having a rich
155; /. 329.
soil, fertile, II. x.
loud-sounding ov,

, ,,tered, u.
f.
3i7. .
by sync. (from pea , Jupiter, thundering, II. jj. 411.— loud-

sounding shore, lofty loud-sounding dome,

,
by prefixing s) I cause my voice to flow, echoing, spacious, . 323.— loud-sounding

, ,
,
see II. x. 249. say, tell, speak
authority, command, order
reveal, explain

,&,
,

speak with
tell a secret,
speak in reply, answer
speak against, object, Luke 4. 23.— speak
tb as a friend, call, accost, John 15. 15.
speak of a thing beforehand, foretell, men-
tion, Acts 8. 24.
nounce, declare,

tell by a delegate, an-
state,

relate, part. fut.


,,
feet, trampling.

quarrel, altercate, U.
victory, rival, Od.

,,
contend with,
(for
for
II.
by sync,
. 342. — contend for
. 206. aor. 1. m. inf.
. 729.
tention) I contend, Theo. 12. 31. provoke,
from
— ^,
to rival or

con-


for about to announce,
,
II. .
206.
, ,
,
11. .
appoint —
49. terms, stipulate, specify,
tell the
tell the ivay to learn or to do a
thing, teach, instruct-— egsopat,
TtQoftvi'j, I ask, consult.
, ay,
,
destitute of inhabitants,
imp.
will
f. I dispute, quarrel, off
not be contentious or obstreperous,
Mat. 12. 19. hriwTnv, II. x. 6,
having quarrelled they separated, they se-
parated in consequence of quarrelling—
he

thinly inhabited, A. 1. 5. 4. — solitary, for- contend, rival, II. v. 325.


saken, Acts 1. 20. — unfurnished — unpro- )\, , full of eddies, said of smoke
tected,
destitute,
. 520. s|
II.

-,
. 140.
without, .
,
— deprived of parents,

Luc. 2. 670, sc.
otKYit, to prevail in consequence of the suit
7. 1. 9.

, ^,, ,
clear, II. ,, ^,
.
curling as it rises,

Dor.
stro} r , Agarn. 1473.

Try ph. 224.

,
ov,

well fitted,
eager to de-

much

-/ ,
being abandoned by the adversary.
lwanderinsolitude,Theo. 22.35.
, \, ,
attached to, loved,
Od. x. 347. plur.
11. y. 48. — sweet bard,
by syn-

,, ,.
',, , » and

,
—,
21.•
875.
deprived of
ov, solitary, lonefy,
light,

, — ^,, —
,
still
Mosch.

,
night, Plut. 8.
3. cope for
fit, II. u. 332. Od. /. 100.
, contention, strife, envy, Phil.
fr. I

1.

,
,, a desert, waste, wil- 16.
'', ,
,
derness, Prom. 2.
.
solitude, retirement, A.

,, —,, . ov, very luxuriant,

,
2. 5. 2.— want offriends, 2. 2. 14. II. .
467. very flourishing, Plut. 1. 34.
, one who ,
, , a worker in wool, a labourer,
.-, , ,
alone, a hermit.
lives

,, , .
of destitute hair, bald. II. a. 550. fr. I labour.

, ,
6,
, dwelling in solitude. {7\ loud-sounding,

,,, , wandering in solitude.


,
,
much lamenting, 7^.
.
ev/iftoa, f.

,,
loving solitude, Paul. Sil. 72.
I lay waste, render desolate,
depopulate, Ay. 1. 20.— deprive— forsake,

,
leave exposed, Hec. 31. per. pass. inf. yi(>yi-

,, to be abandoned, E. 5. 3. 27. - ,
,,
,,
very glorious,
celebrated, Orph. 1032.

, .
.
ov, loud clashing, Hes. u. 456.

,, ,
far advanced with young,
loud-lowing, lusty steers.
is rendered desolate, Mat. 12. 25.

,
Med. 90, having with-
drawn them to a solitary place, keep them

,,,
so, i. e. seclude them from their mother.
,
fig tree, II.

^, ,
,
.
1 45.
,

resemble the wild fig.


.jj,
, a wild
a wild fig. hence

the principle of vengeance


^, -
,

,,
', ,
,, , f.
was laid waste, Rev. 18. 17.

the imperat.
desolation, Mat. 24. 15.
, one who lays waste.
withhold, stop,
let him
for
restrain, II.
,)
, , ,
. 75. aor.
personified, fury, II. /. 567. xi
furies, called also by way of euphemy,
from litigation, fury and ven-
geance having their origin in quarrel.
ov, Mercury as the god of
the
— —
— —— — —
509 PP 510

, ,,,,, .
trade, the bestower of profit, profitable, II.
v. 34. 72. fr. to profit, or^sw, to sell.
. 388.
,, ,,a pillar or mile-stone, Dem. 491. 2.
e@ee>5S, ov,

any thing that had on it the

,
wool, fleece, image of Mercury, a block, prop, II. x. 4S5.

,
II.

— —
,,
Od. . 135. 124.fr.
a wool seller ^', sell
a ballast the tongue or fulcrum of a
balance, Plut. 1. 169. —
the loop of a siing,

'-
,
wool. 2. 710. the vehicle
or message of black woes, II. . ] 19. allud-

,
,of a wool seller.
, ov,
like a dealer in wool, Ranse, 1433.
,
a worker in wool ^, ing to i»pw, as a messenger an ear-ring

of beads, Od. a. 296. a rock rising above

I work in wool, card or spin, 3. . the surface of the sea, probably with an

.
1 .

ov, having strong sides, robust,


\. altar consecrated to Mercury, see Virg.

,,
Pyth. 4. 416. fr. and ^
summit, Apoll. 2. 1249. clhf, Ar-

. , —
Ma. li. 112. such rocks were also called

",
,,
chias. 18.

,,
,
fr. f^uitm.
very powerful, II. v. 54.
sag,

,
ilog, hi contention, quarrel, altercation,
strife. sQih

blows, II. x. 5.
,
to fight in angry
words, i. e. in words without coming to

competition, rivalry, xx- , ,,
,
of Mercury, a heap
of stones by the way side, which was sa-
cred to Mercury (Od. -r. 471.) as god of
the public way. It was raised by every tra-
veller adding one stone to the heap as be
passed ,* a festival in ho-
,,
i^tlct
cowardly taunting,

,, , ,
,, --,
they pour out their

dispute,
.
7. strife personified,
the goddess of contention, II. . 440.

, ,
II. .
very sounding, Hes.
38.

lightning
. 0. 815.

bursting
,,,,
nour of Mercury
of Mercury by the way side an unex-
pected treasure or luck, Luc. 1.14.
an image

I keep in balance, poize»


Plut. 10. 30. also p. 74.
last
,
I load with bal-

,
, a ballast, Lye. 618.

-', , \.
forth with a loud crash, Luc. 1. 99. 6, ov, , an inter-
''.,
,^
»
bearing large grapes, rich —
preter a mediator— r„ est,

wine, Od. 111. qualified to interpret,


-, ,
/. fr.
— -, the power of expression, eloquence, £-

^
6, a wrangler not to be

', , -, ^, \,\\\&
,
contended for. for sc. $, it things expressed, style, Long.

-,
is unavailing, S. Elect. 222. 23. the race of inter-

, , . ,
,,
-/, ,contentious.
bates in the forum or senate, Pint. 9. 329.

,, , , ,
having a deep throat, stento-
rian, Plut. 8. 791. wind-pipe.
de- preters, i. e. the demons, Plut. 7. 425.
I interpret, explain, Agam. 625.

1 Cor. 14. 26.


, —
hi interpretation, explanation,
diction, Long. 5.

,
,
352.
, ,—
ov, very costly, II. /3. 447.

, 6,

and impure, Mat. 25. 32.


,
a kid, fawn, II.
a goat as the emblem of the lustful

of a kid or goat, goat flesh, A. 4. 5. 21.

)\,
,,
, , a hurricane, fr. ^,
yi;, hi a consumer of wool,
ov,

a fence, inclosure, the lips as



, . £?,,
',.
,
.

,
,,
", 6,
a little

carved thereon, Od. St. 278.

curies,
,
,
,
sign, proof,
Mercury, Luc. 1. 490.
a bed-post having Mercury

, a carver of Mercuries.
the carving of Mercuries.
n, , capable of carving Mer-
Androm.

the art of carving.


43.

inclosing the teeth, II. v, 211.

Nem. 3. 89.
a place in-

' , ',
closed, a court-yard, II. it. 231. a net,
,,
Pyth. 2. 147,

,

, offspring,
— ,,
ro,
Nem.
a young green
6. 32.
6,
tree or plant

love, desire, II. a. 469.

,
which incloses.

, ,
,, ,
over the inclosure of the sea, over the sea

i. e. spacious or strongly hooped vessels.

uov, also
in the
inclosures of vessels, in inclosing vessels,

the guardian of
— longing for, lust, II.
,
inquire
f.

447.— proceed, Olym.


lovely,
of,

.
. Merc. 31.
creep walk, move, II.
315.

ask about, Od. x. 405,

14. 148. '- .


,
halls, Od.
,,
;, ,
,
. 334.
inclosure, Ajax\ 108.
, advancing time,
upon,, attack, Ajax,
ov, creeping, tx
1
i.

57.
e.

^,
future — creep

, ,, ^, ,, ,
a halt-door keeper, guardian, reptiles,

,said of a seal, Meleag. 129.

2, ye, a prison, Herod. 4. 146. . creeping things, Acts 10. 12.


&, a creeping vine wine, Lye. 579. —
, Mercury, the son of Jupiter and Maia,
,
II. .
f.

227.
I crawl along, walk pensively,

,
the herald of the gods— the patron of
thieves, and president of the board of trade
and of gain, see Horace, lib. 1. 10. and
^-, , -,
, wild thyme, serpyllum.

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