ἔρρινον
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, (ἐν, ῥίς) A sternutatory medicine, Antyll. ap. Orib.8.13.1. II as Adj., ἔ. ἄλευρον Archig. ap. Aët.6.28 ; ἔ. φάρμακα Gal. 11.769, 12.30, al.:—written ἔνρινον, Paus.Gr.Fr.166.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
ἔρρῑνον: ἢ ἔνρινον, τό, (ἐν, ῥίς), φάρμακόν τι πταρμικόν, ἐπιφέρον πταρμόν: «ἀπὸ δὲ τῆς ῥινὸς παρὰ Παυσανίᾳ ἔνρινον ἴσως καὶ ἔρρινον διὰ δύο ρ, ἄρωμα ᾧ τὰς ῥῖνας, φησίν, ἐνεχρίοντο» Εὐστ. 950. 1.