πάγουρος: Difference between revisions

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|Transliteration C=pagouros
|Transliteration C=pagouros
|Beta Code=pa/gouros
|Beta Code=pa/gouros
|Definition=[ᾰ], ὁ, [[crab]], <span class="bibl">Ar.<span class="title">Eq.</span>606</span>, <span class="bibl">Xenarch.8.2</span>, Speus. ap. <span class="bibl">Ath.3.105b</span>, <span class="bibl">Arist.<span class="title">HA</span>525b5</span>, <span class="title">Gp.</span>2.18.3, <span class="title">MAMA</span>3.672 (Corycus):—applied to Phoenix by Lyc.419.
|Definition=[ᾰ], ὁ, [[crab]], [[Aristophanes|Ar.]]''[[The Knights|Eq.]]''606, Xenarch.8.2, Speus. ap. Ath.3.105b, Arist.''HA''525b5, ''Gp.''2.18.3, ''MAMA''3.672 (Corycus):—applied to Phoenix by Lyc.419.
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{{elnl
{{elnl
|elnltext=πάγουρος -ου, ὁ &#91;[[πάγος]], [[οὐρά]]] [[krab]].
|elnltext=πάγουρος -ου, ὁ &#91;[[πάγος]], [[οὐρά]]] [[krab]].
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{{etym
{{etym
|etymtx=Grammatical information: m.<br />Meaning: [[edible crab]], [[crab]], [[Cancer pagurus]] (Ar., Arist.).<br />Other forms: S. below.<br />Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]<br />Etymology: Prop. "whose [[οὑρά]] consists of [[πάγος]]" referring to the harshness of the short back of the body (as opposed to the more soft tail of other sprecies). - The traditional etymology is unconvincing. More probably it is a Pre-Greek word. Furnée (165 w. n. 89. 90 and 331 w. n. 32) connects [[φάγρος]], <b class="b3">φάγωρος ἰξθῦς ποιός</b> H. Latin took the word as [[pagurus]], from where MFr., NFr. <b class="b2">pag(r)ure</b> [[Cancer pagurus]]; with sec. [[r]] also [[φαγρώριος]]. Cf. also [[σκίουρος]].
|etymtx=Grammatical information: m.<br />Meaning: [[edible crab]], [[crab]], [[Cancer pagurus]] (Ar., Arist.).<br />Other forms: S. below.<br />Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]<br />Etymology: Prop. "whose [[οὑρά]] consists of [[πάγος]]" referring to the harshness of the short back of the body (as opposed to the more soft tail of other sprecies). - The traditional etymology is unconvincing. More probably it is a Pre-Greek word. Furnée (165 w. n. 89. 90 and 331 w. n. 32) connects [[φάγρος]], <b class="b3">φάγωρος ἰξθῦς ποιός</b> H. Latin took the word as [[pagurus]], from where MFr., NFr. <b class="b2">pag(r)ure</b> [[Cancer pagurus]]; with sec. [[r]] also [[φαγρώριος]]. Cf. also [[σκίουρος]].
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