βαβύας: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

νόησε δὲ δῖος Ὀδυσσεὺς σαίνοντάς τε κύνας, περί τε κτύπος ἦλθε ποδοῖινgodly Odysseus heard the fawning of dogs, and on top of that came the beat of two feet

Source
(6_15)
 
m (Text replacement - "(?s)({{LSJ.*}}\n)({{.*}}\n)({{DGE.*}}\n)" to "$1$3$2")
 
(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{LSJ2
|Full diacritics=βαβύας
|Medium diacritics=βαβύας
|Low diacritics=βαβύας
|Capitals=ΒΑΒΥΑΣ
|Transliteration A=babýas
|Transliteration B=babyas
|Transliteration C=vavyas
|Beta Code=babu/as
|Definition=ὁ, [[mud]], Hsch. — also [[βαβύλας]], Suid.
}}
{{DGE
|dgtxt=ὁ [[fango]] Hsch.
}}
{{ls
{{ls
|lstext='''βαβύας''': ὁ, πηλός, λάσπη, παρ' Ἡσυχ.· [[ὡσαύτως]] βαβύλας, Σουΐδ., κτλ.
|lstext='''βαβύας''': ὁ, πηλός, λάσπη, παρ' Ἡσυχ.· [[ὡσαύτως]] βαβύλας, Σουΐδ., κτλ.
}}
{{etym
|etymtx=Grammatical information: m./f.?<br />Meaning: [[βόρβορος]], [[πηλός]] H; <b class="b3">βαβύη χείμαρρος</b>, <b class="b3">οἱ δε πόλις</b> [read [[πηλός]]?] H.; [[βακίας]] [read [[βαβύας]]?] [[βόρβορος]], <b class="b3">πηλός ὑπὸ Ταραντίνων</b> EM 186,1<br />Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]<br />Etymology: V. Blumenthal Hesychst. 20 suggests Messapian origin (ending [[-uos]]). The meaning rather suggests a Pre-Greek word.
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 11:50, 1 October 2022

Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: βαβύας Medium diacritics: βαβύας Low diacritics: βαβύας Capitals: ΒΑΒΥΑΣ
Transliteration A: babýas Transliteration B: babyas Transliteration C: vavyas Beta Code: babu/as

English (LSJ)

ὁ, mud, Hsch. — also βαβύλας, Suid.

Spanish (DGE)

fango Hsch.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

βαβύας: ὁ, πηλός, λάσπη, παρ' Ἡσυχ.· ὡσαύτως βαβύλας, Σουΐδ., κτλ.

Frisk Etymological English

Grammatical information: m./f.?
Meaning: βόρβορος, πηλός H; βαβύη χείμαρρος, οἱ δε πόλις [read πηλός?] H.; βακίας [read βαβύας?] βόρβορος, πηλός ὑπὸ Ταραντίνων EM 186,1
Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]
Etymology: V. Blumenthal Hesychst. 20 suggests Messapian origin (ending -uos). The meaning rather suggests a Pre-Greek word.