σιδηρεύς
ἀλλὰ τί ἦ μοι ταῦτα περὶ δρῦν ἢ περὶ πέτρην → why all this about trees and rocks, why all these things we have nothing to do with
English (LSJ)
έως, ὁ, worker in iron, smith, X.Ages.1.26, Vect.4.6, Aret.SD1.11, Them.Or.20.236 d.
German (Pape)
[Seite 879] ὁ, Eisenarbeiter, Schmied; Xen. Ages. 1, 26 Vect. 4, 6; Poll. 1, 84.
French (Bailly abrégé)
έως (ὁ) :
forgeron.
Étymologie: σίδηρος.
Russian (Dvoretsky)
σῐδηρεύς: έως ὁ кузнец Xen.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
σῐδηρεύς: έως, ὁ, ὁ ἐργαζόμενος τὸν σίδηρον, σιδηρουργός, Ξεν. Ἀγησ. 1, 26, Πόροι 4, 6.
Greek Monolingual
-έως, ὁ, Α
αυτός που κατεργάζεται τον σίδηρο, σιδηρουργός.
[ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. < σίδηρος + κατάλ. -εύς (πρβλ. χαλκ-εύς)].
Greek Monotonic
σῐδηρεύς: -έως, ὁ, αυτός που κατεργάζεται τον σίδηρο, σιδηρουργός, σιδεράς, σε Ξεν.
Translations
Albanian: farkëtar, mbathtar; Arabic: حَدَّاد, قَيْن; Egyptian Arabic: حداد; Aragonese: ferrero, ferrera; Armenian: դարբին; Aromanian: hirar, favru, favur; Asturian: ferreru; Azerbaijani: dəmirçi; Basque: errementari; Belarusian: каваль; Bengali: কামার; Breton: gov; Bulgarian: ковач; Burmese: ပန်းပဲသမား; Catalan: ferrer; Chinese Mandarin: 鐵匠, 铁匠; Czech: kovář; Dalmatian: favro; Danish: smed; Dutch: smid; English: iron-worker, ironworker, blacksmith, iron worker, worker in iron, smith; Erzya: сипе; Esperanto: forĝisto; Estonian: sepp; Faroese: jarnsmiður, smiður; Finnish: seppä; Franco-Provençal: favro; French: forgeron, forgeronne, sidérurgiste; Old French: fevre; Friulian: fari; Galician: ferreiro, ferreira; Georgian: მჭედელი; German: Eisenschmied, Eisenschmiedin, Grobschmied, Grobschmiedin; Greek: σιδεράς; Ancient Greek: σιδηρουργός, σιδηροτέκτων, σιδηρεύς; Hebrew: נַפָּח, חָרָשׁ בַּרְזֶל; Hindi: लोहार; Hungarian: kovács; Icelandic: járnsmiður; Ido: forjisto; Indonesian: pandai besi, tukang besi; Irish: gabha, gabha dubh; Italian: fabbro ferraio; Japanese: 鍛冶屋; Javanese: pinter; Kabuverdianu: fereru; Karaim: tiemirči; Kazakh: ұста; Khmer: ជាងដែក; Kikuyu: mũturi Korean: 대장장이; Kurdish Central Kurdish: ئاسنگەر; Kyrgyz: темирчи; Ladin: fever; Lao: ຊ່າງເຫຼັກ; Latgalian: kaļvs; Latin: ferrarius, faber ferrarius; Latvian: kalējs, kalvis; Lithuanian: kalvis; Luxembourgish: Schmadd; Macedonian: ковач; Malay: tukang besi; Malayalam: കൊല്ലന്; Maltese: ħaddied; Maori: parakimete; Marathi: लोहार; Nahuatl: tepozpitzqui; Nepali: लौहकार; Norman: forgeux; Norwegian Bokmål: smed, grovsmed; Nynorsk: smed, grovsmed; Occitan: fabre, faure; Old East Slavic: коваль; Old English: īsernsmiþ; Old Javanese: paṇḍe; Oriya: କମାର; Oromo: tumtuu; Pennsylvania German: Blaeckschmitt; Persian: آهنگر; Plautdietsch: Schmett; Polish: kowal; Portuguese: ferreiro, ferreira; Punjabi: ਲੁਹਾਰ, ਲੁਹਾਰੀ; Romanian: fierar, faur, făurar; Romansch: fravi; Russian: кузнец, коваль; Sardinian: ferréli, ferreli, ferreri; Scottish Gaelic: gobha; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: ко̀ва̄ч, кова̀чица; Roman: kòvāč, kovàčica; Sicilian: firraru, mastru firraru; Slovak: kováč, kováčka; Slovene: kovač; Spanish: herrero, herrera; Sudovian: vutrīs; Supyire: tunntun; Swahili: mhunzi; Swedish: smed; Tajik: оҳангар; Telugu: కమ్మరి; Thai: ช่างตีเหล็ก; Tibetan: ལྕགས་བཟོ་བ, མགར་པ; Turkish: demirci; Turkmen: demirçi; Ukrainian: коваль; Urdu: لوہار; Uzbek: temirchi; Venetian: favaro, fravo, feràr; Vietnamese: thợ rèn; Volapük: grobasmitan, grobahismitan, grobajismitan; Welsh: gof; Yiddish: שמיד, קאָוועל, קאָוואַל