ἔντερον
Ἐπηγγείλατο εἰς ἐπανόρθωσιν τῆς πόλεως διὰ τὸ εἶναι ευσεβεστάτη καὶ κηδεμονικὴ. → She pledged herself to the reconstruction of the city because of her being most pious and dutiful.
English (LSJ)
τό,
A piece of the guts or intestines, ἐϋστρεφὲς ἔντερον οἰός a string of sheep's gut, Od.21.408: elsewh. in Hom. always pl., ἔντερα guts, bowels, Il.13.507,al., cf. A.Ag.1221, Ar.Eq.1184, Ra. 476, Pl.Ti.73a: in sg., gut, bowel, Arist.HA524b13; τοὔντερον τῆς ἐμπίδος Ar.Nu.160; collectively, bowels, Arist.HA514b13, al.; womb, belly, Archil.142, cf. Luc.Lex.6; ἐπὶ μετρίῳ ἐντέρῳ for moderation in eating, LXX.Si.34.20, cf. AP9.170 (Pall.): metaph., inside of fruit, ib.14.57. II ἔντερα γῆς earth-worms, Arist.IA705b28, 709a28, Arat.959, Numen. ap. Ath.7.305a; but worm-casts, Arist.HA570a16, Thphr.Sign.42, Nic.Th.388. III bag made of gut, Hp.Morb.3.1. (I.-E. *en-tero-, Comp. of *en 'in'.)
German (Pape)
[Seite 855] τό, das Innere, bes. der Darm, gew. im plur., das Gedärm, die Eingeweide; διὰ δ' ἔντερα χαλκὸς ἤφυσε Il. 13, 507; σὺν ἐντέροις τε σπλάγχνα Aesch. Ag. 1194; Ar. Ran. 478; Plat. Tim. 73 a u. Folgde, ἐϋστρεφὲς ἔντερον οἰός, Schaafsdarm, Darmsaite, Od. 21, 408, A. H. bei Ael. V. H. 4, 14 τὰ κατ' ὀβολὸν συνα χθέντα χρήματα εἰς πόρνης ἔντερον καταίρουσι, vgl. ἐντέριον, wie es bei Hippocr. für Blase, Beutel steht; Luc. Leziph. 6 τοκάδος ὑὸς τὸ ἐμβρυοδόχον ἔντερον, Gebärmutter. – Uebh. das Innere, Aenigm. 20 (XIV, 57); – γῆς, die in der Erde lebenden Regenwürmer, Arat. 959; vgl. Numen. bei Ath. VII, 305 a; Nic. Ther. 388; so im sing., ἔντερον γῆς Ael. H. A. 9, 2.