γλύκασμα

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Revision as of 15:53, 13 May 2023 by Spiros (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "Ancient Greek: δεῦκος, γλύκασμα, γλεύκη, γλεῦκος, γλυκύτης, τὸ γλύκιον, ἡδύτης;" to "Ancient Greek: δεῦκος, γλυκασία, [[γλύ...)

νύμφην τ' ἄνυμφον παρθένον τ' ἀπάρθενον → wife unwed and virgin that is no virgin | bride that is no bride, virgin that is virgin no more | virgin wife and widowed maid | unwed bride and ravished virgin

Source
Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: γλῠκασμα Medium diacritics: γλύκασμα Low diacritics: γλύκασμα Capitals: ΓΛΥΚΑΣΜΑ
Transliteration A: glýkasma Transliteration B: glykasma Transliteration C: glykasma Beta Code: glu/kasma

English (LSJ)

ατος, τό, sweetness, LXX Pr.16.24, al.; sweet wine, ib.Ne.8.10, al.

Spanish (DGE)

-ματος, τό
1 dulzor fig. de las palabras, LXX Pr.16.24.
2 vino dulce LXX 1Es.9.51.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

γλύκασμα: -ατος, τό, γλυκύτης, γλυκὺ πρᾶγμα, Ἑβδ. (Παροιμ. ις΄, 24 κ. ἀλλ.).

Greek Monolingual

το (AM γλύκασμα) γλυκάζω
1. γλυκύτητα
2. γλυκό κρασί
νεοελλ.
1. καταπράυνση
2. (για τον καιρό) βελτίωση
3. τα γλυκάσματα
πολτώδη φαρμακευτικά παρασκευάσματα από φυτά.

German (Pape)

τό, Süßigkeit, LXX.

Translations

sweetness

Afrikaans: soetheid; Albanian: ëmbëlsi; Arabic: حَلَاوَةٌ‎; Aromanian: dultseatsã; Asturian: dulzura; Azerbaijani: şirinlik; Bulgarian: сладост; Catalan: dolçor; Chinese Mandarin: 甜味; Crimean Tatar: tatlılıq; Czech: sladkost; Danish: sødme; Dutch: zoetheid; Esperanto: dolĉeco; Finnish: makeus; Franco-Provençal: dóuçor; Galician: dozura; Georgian: სიტკბო, სიტკბოება; German: Süßigkeit; Greek: γλυκύτητα; Ancient Greek: δεῦκος, γλυκασία, γλύκασμα, γλεύκη, γλεῦκος, γλυκύτης, τὸ γλύκιον, ἡδύτης; Hebrew: מתיקות‎; Hungarian: édesség; Icelandic: sætleik; Italian: dolcezza; Japanese: 甘さ; Kazakh: тәттілік; Kyrgyz: таттуулук; Latin: dulcedo, dulcitas, dulcitudo, dulcor, mellinia, suavitas; Latvian: saldums; Malay: manis; Norwegian Bokmål: sødme, søthet; Nynorsk: søtleik; Occitan: doçor; Old English: swētnes; Polish: słodycz; Portuguese: doçura; Romanian: dulceață; Russian: сладость; Serbo-Croatian: slatkòća; Spanish: dulzura, dulzor, melosidad, dulcedumbre; Swedish: sötma; Tatar: татлылык; Thai: ความหวาน; Turkish: tatlılık; Ukrainian: солодкість; Uzbek: totlilik; Welsh: melyster; Yiddish: זיסקײַט‎