συμμαθητής
ἀλλ' οὑντυγχάνων τὰ πράγματ' ὀρθῶς ἂν τιθῇ, πράξει καλῶς → but he who makes the best of those events he lights upon will not fare ill
English (LSJ)
οῦ, ὁ,
A fellow-disciple, schoolfellow, Pl.Euthd.272c, Gal. 12.835, Ps.-Callisth.1.13; ἐγένονθ' ἑαυτῶν συμμαθηταὶ τῆς τέχνης fellow-pupils in the art, Anaxipp.1.2.
German (Pape)
[Seite 980] ὁ, Mitschüler, τινί, Plat. Euthyd. 272 c.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
συμμᾰθητής: -οῦ, ὁ, ὡς καὶ νῦν, ἐκεῖσε ἄλλους συμμαθητάς μοι φοιτᾶν Πλάτ. Εὐθύδ. 272C· ἐγένονθ’ ἑαυτῶν συμμαθηταὶ τῆς τέχνης, μανθάνοντες ἢ διδασκόμενοι ὁμοῦ τὴν τέχνην, Ἀνάξιππος ἐν «Ἐγκαλυπτομένῳ» 1. 2.
French (Bailly abrégé)
ής, ές :
condisciple.
Étymologie: συμμανθάνω.
English (Strong)
from a compound of σύν and μανθάνω; a co-learner (of Christianity): fellow disciple.
English (Thayer)
(T WH συνμαθητης (cf. ἀπό, II. at the end)), συμμαθητου, ὁ, a fellow-disciple: Plato, Euthyd., p. 272c.; Aesop fab. 48). (Phrynichus says that σύν is not prefixed to πολίτης, δημότης, φυλέτης, and the like, but only to those nouns which denote an association which is πρόσκαιρος i. e. temporary, as συενφηβος, συνθιασώτης, συμπότης. The Latin also observes the same distinction and says commilito meus, but not concivis, but civis meus; see Phryn. ed. Lob., p. 471; (cf. p. 172; Winer's 25).)