βασκαύλης: Difference between revisions
ἀξιοπιστόστερα εἰσί τραύματα φίλου ἢ ἐκούσια φιλήματα ἐχθροῦ → faithful are the wounds of a friend; but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful
m (Text replacement - "<br /><br />" to "<br />") |
m (Text replacement - "perh." to "perhaps") |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
|Transliteration C=vaskaylis | |Transliteration C=vaskaylis | ||
|Beta Code=baskau/lhs | |Beta Code=baskau/lhs | ||
|Definition=ου, ὁ, | |Definition=ου, ὁ, perhaps = Lat. <span class="sense"><span class="bld">A</span> [[vasculum]], POxy.109.22 (iii/iv A. D.).</span> | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{DGE | {{DGE |
Revision as of 13:40, 14 September 2021
English (LSJ)
ου, ὁ, perhaps = Lat. A vasculum, POxy.109.22 (iii/iv A. D.).
Spanish (DGE)
-ου, ὁ n. de un utensilio doméstico POxy.109.22 (III/IV d.C.).
• Etimología: Se ha considerado prést. del lat. uasculum aunque quizá se trate de un error de lectura por βασκαύδης, a su vez prést. del lat. bascauda ‘barreño’ de origen celta. Tb. se ha rel. c. μασκαύλης ‘pila de abluciones’ de origen hebr.
Frisk Etymological English
Grammatical information: m\/f?
Meaning: unknown utensil (POxy. 1, 109, 22, III-IVp).
Other forms: Perhaps μασκαύλης
Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Celt.
Etymology: Grenfell-Hunt suggest Lat. vasculum, but this wil hardly give the Greek form. WH thought that it was a loan from Lat. bascauda, m-. (Mart.) eherner Spülnapf. Thus Szemerényi, Gnomon 43 (1971) 660, but his proposal that the Greek word is due to a misreading of Λ for Δ is improbable; it could well be a phonetic development. Fur. 212 thinks that the word is Pre-Greek, as shown by b\/m and d\/l. He further recalls Talmud. maskel basin, which would confirm origin in an Anatolian language. But Martialis 14, 99 seems to prove that the word is Celtic (or perhaps a Eur. substratum word).
Frisk Etymology German
βασκαύλης: {baskaúlēs}
Meaning: ein Hausgerät unbekannter Art (POxy. 1, 109, 22, III-IVp).
Etymology : Bedeutung und Herkunft unbekannt. Grenfell-Hunt denken fragend an lat. vasculum.
Page 1,224