πνείω
Τί ὕπνος; Καμάτων ἀνάπαυσις, ἰατρῶν κατόρθωμα, δεδεμένων λύσις, ἀγρυπνούντων σοφία, νοσούντων εὐχή, θανάτου εἰκών, ταλαιπωρούντων ἐπιθυμία, πάσης πνοῆς ἡσυχία, πλουσίων ἐπιτήδευμα, πενήτων ἀδολεσχία, καθημερινὴ μελέτη. → What is sleep? Rest from toil, the success of physicians, the release of those who are bound, the wisdom of the wakeful, what sick men pray for, an image of death, the desire of those who toil in hardship, the rest of all the spirit, a principal occupation of the rich, the idle chatter of poor men, a daily object of concern.
English (LSJ)
Ep. for πνέω.
German (Pape)
[Seite 639] poet. statt πνέω, w. m. s.; Hom. u. Hes.; auch Orak. bei Her. 1, 67. Auch πνείεσκον.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
πνείω: Ἐπικ. ἀντὶ πνέω.
French (Bailly abrégé)
épq. c. πνέω.
English (Autenrieth)
(πνέϝω), πνέει, πνείει, aor. subj. πνεύσῃ, mid. perf. 2 sing. πέπνῦσαι, inf. πεπνῦσθαι, part. πεπνῦμένος, plup. 2 sing. πέπνῦσο: (1) breathe, sometimes synonymous with live, Il. 17.447, Od. 18.131; of the wind and air, odors, Od. 4.446; fig., μένεα πνείοντες, ‘breathing might’; ἐν (adv.) δὲ θεὸς πνεύσῃ μένος ἀμφοτέρο<<><>>ν, ‘inspire,’ Il. 19.159.—(2) the perf. mid. comes to mean, be prudent, discreet, Il. 24.377, Od. 10.495; esp. freq. the part. πεπνῦμένος, sensible.
Greek Monolingual
Α
(επικ. τ.) βλ. πνέω.
Greek Monotonic
πνείω: Επικ. αντί πνέω.
Dutch (Woordenboekgrieks.nl)
πνείω zie πνέω.
Russian (Dvoretsky)
πνείω: эп. = πνέω.