Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

δεῦκος

From LSJ
Revision as of 11:49, 25 August 2023 by Spiros (talk | contribs) (LSJ1 replacement)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Ζῆν οὐκ ἄξιος, ὅτῳ μηδὲ εἷς ἐστι χρηστὸς φίλοςLife is not worth living if you do not have at least one friend.

Democritus, DK 68b22
Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: δεῦκος Medium diacritics: δεῦκος Low diacritics: δεύκος Capitals: ΔΕΥΚΟΣ
Transliteration A: deûkos Transliteration B: deukos Transliteration C: deykos Beta Code: deu=kos

English (LSJ)

εος, τό, = γλεῦκος, Sch.A.R.1.1037; Aetol. acc. to Sch. Nic. Th.625.

Spanish (DGE)

-εος, τό
dulzor δ. γὰρ τὸ γλυκύ Sch.A.R.1.1037-38b
etol. según Sch.Nic.Th.625b.
• Etimología: Podría ser un término ficticio para explicar ἀδευκής q.u.

German (Pape)

[Seite 552] τό, = γλεῦκος, Schol. Ap. Rh. 1, 1037.

French (Bailly abrégé)

ion. -εος, att. -ους (τό) :
douceur.
Étymologie: cf. δευκής.

Greek Monolingual

δεῡκος (-ους), το (Α)
το γλεύκος.
[ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. Πρόκειται πιθ. για λ. πλασμένη από τους Σχολιαστές (βλ. και λ. αδευκής), παράλληλος τ. του δευκής.

Translations

sweetness

Afrikaans: soetheid; Albanian: ëmbëlsi; Arabic: حَلَاوَةٌ‎; Aromanian: dultseatsã; Asturian: dulzura; Azerbaijani: şirinlik; Bulgarian: сладост; Catalan: dolçor; Chinese Mandarin: 甜味; Crimean Tatar: tatlılıq; Czech: sladkost; Danish: sødme; Dutch: zoetheid; Esperanto: dolĉeco; Finnish: makeus; Franco-Provençal: dóuçor; Galician: dozura; Georgian: სიტკბო, სიტკბოება; German: Süßigkeit; Greek: γλυκύτητα; Ancient Greek: δεῦκος, γλυκασία, γλύκασμα, γλυκασμός, γλεύκη, γλεῦκος, γλυκύτης, τὸ γλύκιον, ἡδύτης; Hebrew: מתיקות‎; Hungarian: édesség; Icelandic: sætleik; Italian: dolcezza; Japanese: 甘さ; Kazakh: тәттілік; Kyrgyz: таттуулук; Latin: dulcedo, dulcitas, dulcitudo, dulcor, mellinia, suavitas; Latvian: saldums; Malay: manis; Norwegian Bokmål: sødme, søthet; Nynorsk: søtleik; Occitan: doçor; Old English: swētnes; Polish: słodycz; Portuguese: doçura; Romanian: dulceață; Russian: сладость; Serbo-Croatian: slatkòća; Spanish: dulzura, dulzor, melosidad, dulcedumbre; Swedish: sötma; Tatar: татлылык; Thai: ความหวาน; Turkish: tatlılık; Ukrainian: солодкість; Uzbek: totlilik; Welsh: melyster; Yiddish: זיסקײַט‎