πατροκασίγνητος
χλανίσι δὲ δὴ φαναῖσι περιπεπεµµένοι καὶ µαστίχην τρώγοντες, ὄζοντες µύρου. τὸ δ’ ὅλον οὐκ ἐπίσταµαι ἐγὼ ψιθυρίζειν, οὐδὲ κατακεκλασµένος πλάγιον ποιήσας τὸν τράχηλον περιπατεῖν, ὥσπερ ἑτέρους ὁρῶ κιναίδους ἐνθάδε πολλοὺς ἐν ἄστει καὶ πεπιττοκοπηµένους → Dressed up in bright clean fine cloaks and nibbling pine-thistle, smelling of myrrh. But I do not at all know how to whisper, nor how to be enervated, and make my neck go back and forth, just as I see many others, kinaidoi, here in the city, do, and waxed with pitch-plasters.
English (LSJ)
ὁ, father's brother, Il.21.469, Od.6.330, 13.342, Hes. Th.501.
German (Pape)
[Seite 536] ὁ, Vaters Bruder, Oheim, Il. 21, 469 Od. 13, 342; Hes. Th. 501; sp. D., wie Orph. Arg. 832.
French (Bailly abrégé)
ου (ὁ) :
oncle paternel.
Étymologie: πατήρ, κασίγνητος.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
πατροκᾰσίγνητος: ὁ, ὁ τοῦ πατρὸς ἀδελφός, Ἰλ. Φ. 469, Ὀδ. Ζ. 330, Ν. 342, Ἡσ. Θ. 510. πρβλ. πατράδελφος.
English (Autenrieth)
father's brother, uncle. (Od. and Il. 21.469.)
Greek Monolingual
ὁ, Α
ο αδελφός του πατέρα, ο θείος.
[ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. < πατήρ, πατρός + κασίγνητος «αδελφός»].
Greek Monotonic
πατροκᾰσίγνητος: ὁ, αδελφός του πατέρα, σε Όμηρ., Ησίοδ.
Russian (Dvoretsky)
πατροκᾰσίγνητος: ὁ брат отца, дядя с отцовской стороны Hom., Hes.
Dutch (Woordenboekgrieks.nl)
πατροκασίγνητος -ου, ὁ [πατήρ, κασίγνητος] oom (van vaderskant).
Middle Liddell
πατρο-κᾰσίγνητος, ὁ,
a father's brother, Hom., Hes.
Translations
Albanian: ungji, xhaxha, dajë; Amharic: ኣጎት; Arabic: عَمّ, خَال, زَوْجُ العَمّة, زَوْجُ الخالة; Armenian: հորեղբայր, քեռի; Assamese: খুৰা, বৰদেউতা, মোমাই; Asturian: tíu; Azerbaijani: əmi, dayı; Bakhtiari: کاکا; Baluchi: ناکو, ماما, کاکہ; Basque: osaba; Belarusian: дзядзька, дзядзя; Bengali: মামা, চাচা, ফুফা, খালু; Breton: eontr; Bulgarian: чичо, стрико, вуйчо, калеко, свако; Burmese: ဘကြီး, ဘထွေး; Catalan: oncle, tio, tiet; Central Dusun: mamai; Chechen: ваша; Cherokee: ᎡᏚᏥ; Chinese Cantonese: 伯伯, 叔叔, 姑丈, 舅父, 姨丈; Hakka: 阿伯, 阿叔, 阿舅, 母舅, 姑丈, 姨丈; Mandarin: 伯父, 伯伯, 叔父, 叔叔, 姑父, 姑丈, 舅父, 舅舅, 姨父, 姨丈, 姨夫; Min Dong: 依伯; Min Nan: 阿伯, 阿叔, 阿舅, 母舅, 阿丈, 姑丈, 姨丈; Teochew: 阿伯, 阿叔, 阿舅, 阿丈; Chinook Jargon: tot; Crimean Tatar: dayı; Czech: strýc; Dalmatian: naul; Danish: onkel, farbror, morbror; Dutch: oom, nonkel; Esperanto: onklo; Estonian: onu; Ewe: tɔgã, tɔɖe, wɔfa; Finnish: setä, setäpuoli, eno, enopuoli; French: oncle, tonton; Friulian: barbe; Galician: tío; Georgian: ბიძა, ძია, ბიძია; German: Onkel, Oheim; Gooniyandi: ngaboo; Greek: θείος; Ancient Greek: θεῖος, πάτρως, μήτρως; Gunwinggu: ngabba, ngadjadj; Haitian Creole: tonton, monnonk; Hawaiian: makua kāne, ʻanakala; Hebrew: דּוֹד; Hindi: चाचा, ताया, काका, मामा, अंकल; Hungarian: nagybácsi; Icelandic: föðurbróðir, móðurbróðir; Ido: onklulo; Indonesian: paman, om; Interlingua: oncle; Irish: uncail; Italian: zio; Japanese: 伯父; 伯父貴; 叔父, 叔父貴; Kabyle: zizi; Kashmiri: پیٔتٕر, پۄپھُو, مام, ماسُو; Kapampangan: bapa; Kazakh: немере аға, ağa, nağaşı; Khoekhoe: ǁnaosab; Korean: 아저씨, 삼촌; Krisa: tani baʼ, tani pung, wini; Kumyk: атасыны агъасы, анасыны агъасы, атасыны иниси, анасыны инеси; Kurdish Central Kurdish: مام, خاڵ; Northern Kurdish: mam, ap, xal; Lao: ລຸງ; Latgalian: dzedzeits; Latin: patruus, avunculus; Latvian: tēvocis, tēva brālis, mātes brālis; Lithuanian: dėdė; Macedonian: тетин, чичко, вујко, стрико; Malay: pakcik, bapa saudara; Malayalam: അമ്മാവന്, മാമന്, വല്യച്ചന്, ചെറിയച്ചന്; Maori: matua kēkē; Marathi: मामा, काका; Maricopa: nkwii; Melpa: apa; Meriam: bab; Middle English: uncle, em; Minangkabau: mamak; Mongolian: авга ах, нагац ах, авга эрэгтэй дүү, нагац эрэгтэй дүү; Montana Salish: smamáʔ; Mòcheno: barba; Nanai: эчэкэ, гусин; Navajo: adáʼí, ayáázh, abízhí, azhéʼéyázhí; Norman: aonclle, oncl'ye; North Frisian: Oom; Northern Ohlone: 'et̄e; Northern Sami: čeahci, eahki, eanu, máhka; Norwegian Bokmål: onkel, farbror, morbror; Occitan: oncle, quenque; Old English: fædera, ēam; Old French: oncle; Oromo: eessuma, wasiila; Pashto: تره, ماما; Pennsylvania German: Onkel; Persian: عمو, دائی, خالو, افدر, اودر, کاکا, کاکو; Pitjantjatjara: mama maḻatja, mama puḻka; Plautdietsch: Onkel; Polish: stryj pers, stryjek pers, wuj pers, wujek pers; Portuguese: tio; Quechua: qaka, kaka, kaku, yaya; Romani: kak; Romanian: unchi; Romansch: aug, barba; Russian: дядя, дядька, дядюшка; Rusyn: уйко; Sanskrit: मातुल, पितृव्य; Sardinian: tiu, ciu, tziu; Saterland Frisian: Oom; Scots: uncle, eme, mither-brither; Scottish Gaelic: bràthair-athar, bràthair-màthar, uncail; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: стриц, чичa, амиџа, тетак, течa, течо, ујак, даиџа; Roman: stric, čiča, amidža, tetak, teča, tečo, ujak, daidža; Seri: aaitz; Sicilian: ziu, zu; Sidamo: wosiila; Sinhalese: මාමා; Slovak: strýko; Slovene: stric; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: wujk; Southern Sierra Miwok: ka·ka·; Spanish: tío; Sundanese: amang, mamang; Swedish: onkel, farbror, fars svåger, ingift farbror, morbror, mors svåger, ingift morbror; Tagalog: tito, tiyo, tiyuhin; Talysh: عمو; Tamil:, பெரியப்ப, சிதப்ப; Thai: ลุง, อา, น้า; Tibetan: ཨ་ཞང, ཨ་ཁུ; Torres Strait Creole: ankel; Turkish: amca, dayı, enişte; Turkmen: aga, daýy; Tuvan: аккызы, даайы; Ukrainian: дядько; Urdu: چچا; Venetian: sio, zhio, barba; Vietnamese: bác, chú, cậu; Volapük: hiter, ziom; Welsh: ewythr, ewythredd; West Frisian: omme, omke; Yiddish: פֿעטער; Yámana: tanowa