ἀνθυπατεύω

From LSJ
Revision as of 16:32, 31 December 2018 by Spiros (talk | contribs) (1)

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

Source
Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: ἀνθῠπᾰτεύω Medium diacritics: ἀνθυπατεύω Low diacritics: ανθυπατεύω Capitals: ΑΝΘΥΠΑΤΕΥΩ
Transliteration A: anthypateúō Transliteration B: anthypateuō Transliteration C: anthypateyo Beta Code: a)nqupateu/w

English (LSJ)

   A to be proconsul, Plu.Comp.Dem.Cic.3, Act.Ap.18.12, Hdn.7.5.2.

German (Pape)

[Seite 235] Proconsul sein, Plut. Demetr. et Cic. 3.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

ἀνθυπᾰτεύω: εἶμαι ἀνθύπατος, Πλουτ. Σύγκρ. Δημ. καὶ Κικέρ. 3, Ἡρωδιαν. 7. 5.

French (Bailly abrégé)

être proconsul.
Étymologie: ἀνθύπατος.

Spanish (DGE)

ser procónsul, IG 7.1866 (I d.C.), Plu.Comp.Dem.Cic.3, SEG 9.175 (Cirenaica II d.C.), Hdn.7.5.2, IG 22.3689 (III d.C.), Mart.Pol.21.

English (Strong)

from ἀνθύπατος; to act as proconsul: be the deputy.

English (Thayer)

(ἀντί for i. e. in lieu or stead of anyone, and ὑπατεύω to be ὕπατος, to be supreme, to be consul); to be proconsul: R G; cf. Buttmann, 169 (147)). (Plutarch, comp. Demosthenes c. Cicero,
c. 3; Herodian, 7,5, 2.)

Greek Monolingual

ἀνθυπατεύω (Α)
είμαι ανθύπατος.

Greek Monotonic

ἀνθυπᾰτεύω: είμαι ανθύπατος, σε Πλούτ.

Russian (Dvoretsky)

ἀνθυπᾰτεύω: быть (римским) проконсулом Plut.