above
πενία μόνα τὰς τέχνας ἐγείρει → poverty alone promotes skilled work, necessity is the mother of invention, necessity is the mother of all invention, poverty is the mother of invention, out of necessity comes invention, out of necessity came invention, frugality is the mother of invention
English > Greek (Woodhouse)
adverb
P. and V. ἄνω, Ar. and P. ἐπάνω.
in a former passage (in a book): P. ἄνω.
from above: P. and V. ἄνωθεν, P. καθύπερθε, ἐπάνωθεν, V. ὑψόθεν (Plato also but rare P.), ἐξύπερθε.
above ground, on earth: P. and V. ἄνω, V. ἄνωθεν.
preposition
of place. P. and V. ὑπέρ (gen.).
of measure: P. and V. ὑπέρ (acc.)
in preference to: P. and V. πρό (gen.), P. ἔμπροσθεν (gen.), V. πρόσθε (gen.), πάρος (gen.).
superior to: use P. and V. κρείσσων (gen.), V. ὑπέρτερος (gen.).
above being bribed: P. χρημάτων κρείσσων.
above the law: P. ἔμπροσθεν τῶν νόμων.
not to wish to be above the law: τῶν νόμων γε μὴ πρότερος εἶναι θέλειν (Euripides, Orestes 487).
remain over and above: Ar. and P. περιγίγνεσθαι, P. περιεῖναι.