Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

ἀστεμφέως: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

L'amor che move il sole e l'altre stelleLove that moves the sun and the other stars

Dante Alighieri, Paradiso, XXXIII, v. 145
m (Text replacement - "(*UTF)(*UCP)(:''') ([\p{Cyrillic}\s]+), ([\p{Cyrillic}\s]+) ([a-zA-Z:\(])" to "$1 $2, $3 $4")
m (Text replacement - "(*UTF)(*UCP)btext=(.*?<br \/>)([\w\s'-]+)\.<br" to "btext=$1.<br")
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Autenrieth
|auten=[[firmly]], [[fast]]; ἔχειν, Od. 4.419, 459.
}}
{{bailly
{{bailly
|btext=<i>adv.</i><br />fermement.<br />'''Étymologie:''' [[ἀστεμφής]].
|btext=<i>adv.</i><br />[[fermement]].<br />'''Étymologie:''' [[ἀστεμφής]].
}}
}}
{{Autenrieth
{{eles
|auten=[[firmly]], [[fast]]; ἔχειν, Od. 4.419, 459.
|esgtx=[[con firmeza]], [[firmemente]]
}}
}}
{{elru
{{elru
|elrutext='''ἀστεμφέως:''' [[непоколебимо]], [[твердо]] (ἔχειν Hom.).
|elrutext='''ἀστεμφέως:''' [[непоколебимо]], [[твердо]] (ἔχειν Hom.).
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 11:20, 9 January 2023

English (Autenrieth)

firmly, fast; ἔχειν, Od. 4.419, 459.

French (Bailly abrégé)

adv.
fermement.
Étymologie: ἀστεμφής.

Spanish

con firmeza, firmemente

Russian (Dvoretsky)

ἀστεμφέως: непоколебимо, твердо (ἔχειν Hom.).