δηνάριον

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τίς ἥδε κραυγὴ καὶ δόμων περίστασις; → what means this uproar and thronging about the house, what means the crowd standing round the house?

Source
Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: δηνάριον Medium diacritics: δηνάριον Low diacritics: δηνάριον Capitals: ΔΗΝΑΡΙΟΝ
Transliteration A: dēnárion Transliteration B: dēnarion Transliteration C: dinarion Beta Code: dhna/rion

English (LSJ)

τό, = Lat.

   A denarius (usu. represented by δραχμή (q. v.)), Arr.Epict.1.4.16, Placit.4.11.5, etc.; = one tetradrachm, PLond.2.248.20 (iv A. D.), POxy.1431.3 (iv A. D.).

German (Pape)

[Seite 567] τό, die römische Münze, der Denar, Plut. Camill. 12, öfter.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

δηνάριον: τό, Ρωμαϊκὸν νόμισμα, denarius, σχεδὸν ἴσον τῇ ἑλληνικῇ δραχμῇ, Πλούτ. 2. 900C.

French (Bailly abrégé)

ου (τό) :
= lat. denarius, denier.

Spanish (DGE)

-ου, τό

• Grafía: graf. δειν- IG 9(2).415b.89, 1104.14 (ambas Tesalia I a.C.), διν- ID 1439Abc.1.83, 1441A.1.89, 1449Aa.2.23, 36 (todas II d.C.)
lat. denarius
I numism. denario
1 moneda romana de plata, en origen de peso similar a la dracma ática y equivalente a diez ases IG ll.cc., Hero Mens.60.23, Plu.Cam.13, Cic.8, Arr.Epict.1.4.16, Apoc.6.6, Placit.4.11.5, Hierocl.Facet.86, Nonn.Par.Eu.Io.6.7, δραχμὴν λέγομεν ... ὅπερ Ῥωμαῖοι δηνάριον ὀνομάζουσιν Gal.13.160, ἀργυρίου δηνάρια IIasos 248.15 (II d.C.), cf. IEphesos 21.1.31, 2.12 (II d.C.), IAssos 25.5, 7 (imper.), BGU 276.13 (II/III d.C.), IG 10(2).609.7 (III d.C.), POxy.1414.9, PSI 289.12 (ambos III d.C.), BGU 1049.13 (IV d.C.), 694.3 (V d.C.), ἔλαβον [τὸ] ἀνὰ δηνάριον tomaron el denario que le correspondía a cada uno, Eu.Matt.20.10, cf. IG 12(5).667.21 (Siro III d.C.)
en prestaciones especiales tras el acceso a un cargo κήρυκα ... γενόμενον ἐπὶ δ[η] ναρίοις δυσί IG 22.3546.11 (I d.C.), cf. IStratonikeia 701.11 (II/III d.C.), equiv. al tetradracma PAbinn.43.20 (IV d.C.), POxy.1431.3 (IV d.C.).
2 moneda de oro, el denarius aureus romano δ. χρυσοῦν Peripl.M.Rubri 8, 49, χρυσᾶ παλαιὰ δηνάρια IGR 3.1050 (Palmira II d.C.), cf. Res gestae Saporis 9.
3 moneda de estaño en Histiea δ. καττιτέρινον ἱστιαιικόν ID 1439Abc.1.83, 1441A.1.89 (ambas II d.C.).
II metrol. denario como unidad de peso, Hero Mens.60.1, ὄνυχος τέσσερα δηνάρια ὁλκῆς POxy.1142.4 (III d.C.), σταθμὸν δηναρίου ἑνός Hippiatr.22.51.

English (Strong)

of Latin origin; a denarius (or ten asses): pence, penny(-worth).

English (Thayer)

δηναρίου, τό (Plutarch, Epictetus, others), a Latin word, a denarius, a silver coin, originally consisting of ten (whence its name), afterward (from 217 B.C.> on) of sixteen asses; about (3.898 grams, i. e. 8 1/2pence or 16 2/3cents; rapidly debased from Nero on; cf. BB. DD. under the word <TOPIC:Denarius>): Winer s Grammar, 587 (546); Buttmann, 164 (143)); τό ἀνά δηνάριον namely, ὄν, the pay of a denarius apiece promised to each workman, T Tr (txt., Tr marginal reading WH brackets τό).

Greek Monotonic

δηνάριον: τό, ρωμαϊκό νόμισμα, δηνάριο, περίπου = ελλ. δραχμή, σε Καινή Διαθήκη

Dutch (Woordenboekgrieks.nl)

δηνάριον -ου, τό denarius.