θυσιαστήριον
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)
τό,
A altar, ib.Ex.27.1, al., Ev.Matt.23.18, J.AJ8.4.1, Cod.Just.1.12.3.2.
German (Pape)
[Seite 1228] τό, Opfertisch, Altar, Philo, LXX.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
θῠσιαστήριον: τό, βωμός, Ἑβδ. (Ἔξ. ΚΖ΄, 1 κἑξ., κ. ἀλλ.), Καιν. Διαθ.
French (Bailly abrégé)
ου (τό) :
autel pour le sacrifice.
Étymologie: θυσιαστήριος.
Spanish
English (Strong)
from a derivative of θυσία; a place of sacrifice, i.e. an altar (special or genitive case, literal or figurative): altar.
English (Thayer)
θυσιαστηρίου, τό (neuter of the adjective θυσιαστηριος (cf. Winer's Grammar, 96 (91)), and this from θυσιάζω to sacrifice), a word found only in Philo (e. g. vita Moys. iii. § 10, cf. § 7; Josephus, Antiquities 8,4, 1) and the Biblical and ecclesiastical writings; the Sept. times without number for מִזְבֵּחַ; properly, an altar for the slaying and burning of victims; used of:
1. the altar of whole burnt-offerings which stood in the court of the priests in the temple at Jerusalem (B. D. under the word Smith's Bible Dictionary, Altar): the altar of incense, which stood in the sanctuary or Holy place (B. D. as above): τό θυσιαστήριον τοῦ θυμιάματος, to eat of this altar i. e. to appropriate to oneself the fruits of Christ's expiatory death, Hebrews 13:10.
Greek Monotonic
θῠσιαστήριον: τό, βωμός, θυσιαστήριο, σε Καινή Διαθήκη