γλυκυσίδη

English (LSJ)

[ῑ], ἡ, peony (γλυκυσίδη ἄρρην = Paeonia officinalis, γλυκυσίδη θήλεια = Paeonia corallina, Dsc.3.140), Hp.Superf.33, Mul.2.136, Pl.Com.61, Thphr. HP 9.8.6.

Spanish (DGE)

(γλῠκῠσίδη) -ης, ἡ
• Grafía: graf. γλυκι- Cyran.1.3.1
• Prosodia: [-ῑ-]
bot. peonía, Paeonia sp., Hp.Superf.33, Mul.2.136, Pl.Com.62, Thphr.HP 9.8.6, Nic.Th.940, Seleuc.46, Cyran.l.c., Plin.HN 27.84, Scrib.Larg.166, Ps.Apul.Herb.65.9, Isid.Etym.17.9.48, Phot.γ 152
γ. ἄρρην peonía macho, Paeonia mascula (L.) Miller, Dsc.3.140
γ. θήλεια peonía hembra, Paeonia officinalis L., Dsc.3.140.

French (Bailly abrégé)

ης (ἡ) :
pivoine, plante.
Étymologie: γλυκύς.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

γλῠκῠσίδη: [ῑ], ἡ, εἶδος φυτοῦ, ἡ παιωνία, Πλάτ. Κωμ. Κλεοφ. 5, Θεόφρ. Ἱ. Φ. 9. 8, 6.

Greek Monolingual

γλυκυσίδη, η (Α)
το φυτό παιωνία, πηγούνια.
[ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. < γλυκύς + σίδη «γένος φυτών»].

Dutch (Woordenboekgrieks.nl)

γλυκυσίδη -ης, ἡ γλυκύς, σίδη pioenroos.

German (Pape)

ἡ, Päonie, Theophr., Nic. Th. 940 und sonst. Vgl. Ath. III.76f aus Plat. com.

Translations

peony

Albanian: lulegjake, bozhure; Armenian: քաջվարդ, պիոն; Azerbaijani: pion; Belarusian: півоня; Bulgarian: божур; Catalan: peònia; Chechen: цӏен лерг; Chinese Cantonese: 牡丹; Mandarin: 牡丹; Chuvash: пион; Crimean Tatar: şaqayıq; Czech: pivoňka; Danish: pæon; Dutch: pioen, pioenroos; Estonian: pojeng; Finnish: pioni; French: pivoine; Galician: peonia; Georgian: იორდასალამი; German: Pfingstrose, Päonie; Greek: παιωνία; Ancient Greek: ἀγλαόφαντον, ἀγλαοφῶτις, αἱμαγωγόν, ἀλφαιωνία, ἀλφαωνιά, ἀλφαωνία, γλαβρήνη, γλαοφώτη, γλυκυσίδη, γλυκυσίδιον, γλυκυσῖτις, δάκτυλοι Ἰδαῖοι, διχόμηνος, τὸ διχότομον, διχότομον, Ἑκατεία, ἐφιαλτεία, ἐφιαλτία, ἐφιάλτιον, θεοδόνιον, θεοδώνιον, κυνόσπαστος, μήνιον, ὀροβάδιον, ὀρόβαξ, παιωνία, παιονίη, σελήνιον, σεληνόγονον, σεληνόγονος; Hebrew: אַדְמוֹנִית‎; Hungarian: bazsarózsa; Italian: peonia; Japanese: 牡丹, ボタン; Kashubian: bùjón; Kazakh: таушымылдық, шұғынық, сәлдегүл; Korean: 모란; Kyrgyz: пион; Latin: paeonia; Latvian: peonija; Lithuanian: bijūnas; Macedonian: божур; Mongolian: цээнэ цэцэг; Norman: pâsse-rose; Polish: piwonia, peonia; Portuguese: peônia, peónia; Romanian: bujor; Russian: пион; Serbo-Croatian: божур, božur; Slovene: potonika; Spanish: peonía; Swedish: pion; Tatar: пион, чалма чәчәк, чалмабаш; Thai: โบตั๋น; Turkish: şakayık; Ukrainian: півонія; Uzbek: sallagul; Vietnamese: mẫu đơn