κεφαλαργία
νήπιοι, οἷς ταύτῃ κεῖται νόος, οὐδὲ ἴσασιν ὡς χρόνος ἔσθ᾿ ἥβης καὶ βιότου ὀλίγος θνητοῖς. ἀλλὰ σὺ ταῦτα μαθὼν βιότου ποτὶ τέρμα ψυχῇ τῶν ἀγαθῶν τλῆθι χαριζόμενος → fools, to think like that and not realise that mortals' time for youth and life is brief: you must take note of this, and since you are near the end of your life endure, indulging yourself with good things | Poor fools they to think so and not to know that the time of youth and life is but short for such as be mortal! Wherefore be thou wise in time, and fail not when the end is near to give thy soul freely of the best.
English (LSJ)
ἡ, later form for κεφαλαλγία, Luc. Jud.Voc.4:— hence κεφαλαργέω, PMag.Par.1.136; give one a headache, Hsch. s.v. ὠτοκοπεῖ.
German (Pape)
[Seite 1428] ἡ, att. für κεφαλαλγία, Greg. Cor. 158; vgl. Luc. Iud. voc. 4.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
κεφαλαργία: ἡ, μεταγεν. τύπος ἀντὶ τοῦ κεφαλαλγία, Λουκ. Δίκη Φωνηέντ. 4· πρβλ. Schäf. Γρηγ. σ. 158· ― οὕτω κεφαλαργέω, (νῦν γράφεται κεφαλαλγέω), ἐνοχλῶ λαλῶν, Ἡσύχ. ἐν λέξ. ὠτοκοπεῖ.
French (Bailly abrégé)
ας (ἡ) :
mal de tête.
Étymologie: par dissimil. de κεφαλαλγία.
Greek Monolingual
κεφαλαργία, ἡ (ΑΜ) κεφαλαργώ
(μτγν. τ. αντί κεφαλαλγία) πόνος της κεφαλής, κεφαλαλγία.
Russian (Dvoretsky)
κεφᾰλαργία: ἡ Luc. = κεφαλαλγία.
Translations
Albanian: dhembje koke; Arabic: صُدَاع; Egyptian Arabic: صداع; Hijazi Arabic: صُداع; Armenian: գլխացավ; Assamese: মূৰৰ বিষ; Bashkir: баш ауыртыу; Basque: buruko min; Belarusian: галаўны боль; Breton: poan-benn; Bulgarian: главоболие; Burmese: ခေါင်းကိုက်ခြင်း; Catalan: mal de cap; Chinese Cantonese: 頭痛, 头痛, 頭赤, 头赤; Hakka: 頭那痛, 头那痛; Mandarin: 頭疼, 头疼, 頭痛, 头痛; Min Nan: 頭疼, 头疼, 頭殼疼, 头壳疼; Czech: bolest hlavy, cefalea, cefalgie; Danish: hovedpine; Dutch: hoofdpijn, koppijn; Elfdalian: sårskollan; Erzya: пряорма; Esperanto: kapdoloro; Estonian: peavalu; Faroese: høvuðpína, høvuðverkur; Finnish: päänsärky; French: mal de tête; Galician: dor de cabeza; Georgian: თავის ტკივილი; German: Kopfschmerzen, Kopfweh, Kopfschmerz; Greek: πονοκέφαλος, κεφαλόπονος, κεφαλαλγία; Ancient Greek: κεφαλαλγία, κεφαλαλγίη, κεφαλαργία, κεφαλάλγημα, καρηβαρία, καρηβαρίη; Gujarati: માથાનો દુખાવો; Hebrew: כאב ראש; Hindi: सिरदर्द, सरदर्द; Hungarian: fejfájás; Icelandic: höfuðverkur, hausverkur; Ido: kapodoloro; Indonesian: sakit kepala; Interlingua: mal de testa, mal de capite; Irish: tinneas cinn; Italian: mal di testa; Japanese: 頭痛; Kazakh: бас ауруы; Khmer: ជំងឺឈឺក្បាល; Korean: 두통(頭痛); Kurdish Central Kurdish: سەرێشە; Latin: capitis dolor, dolor capitis, cephalalgia, cephalargia; Latvian: galvassāpes; Lithuanian: galvos skausmas; Luxembourgish: Kappwéi; Macedonian: главоболка; Malagasy: aretin'andoha; Malayalam: തലവേദന; Maltese: uġigħ ta' ras; Manx: kione-ching; Maori: mōngurunguru, ngāhoahoa, pāhoahoa, kotiuru; Marathi: डोकेदुखी; Nepali: टाउको दुखाइ; Norman: ma d'tête; Norwegian Bokmål: hodepine; Nynorsk: hovudverk; Occitan: mal de cap; Okinawan: 頭病ん; Old English: hēafodeċe; Oromo: mataa bowwuu; Ossetian: сæрниз; Persian: سردرد; Polish: ból głowy; Portuguese: dor de cabeça, enxaqueca; Quechua: uma nanay; Romanian: durere de cap; Russian: головная боль; S'gaw Karen: ခိၣ်ဆါ; Santali: ᱵᱚᱦᱚᱜ ᱦᱟᱹᱥᱩ; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: главобоља; Roman: glavobolja; Sinhalese: හිසරදය; Slovak: bolesť hlavy; Slovene: glavobol; Spanish: dolor de cabeza, cefalea, jaqueca; Swahili: maumivu ya kichwa; Swedish: huvudvärk; Tagalog: sakit ng ulo; Tahitian: hoa; Tamil: தலைவலி; Tatar: баш авырту; Telugu: తలనొప్పి; Thai: ปวดหัว; Turkish: baş ağrısı; Ukrainian: головний біль; Urdu: سر درد; Vietnamese: chứng nhức đầu; Volapük: kapadol; Welsh: cur pen, cur mewn pen, cur yn y pen; Yakut: төбө ыарыыта; Yiddish: קאָפּווייטיק; Yucatec Maya: k'iinam; Zulu: ikhanda, ubuhlungu bekhanda