γάστρων
Πέτρος Ἰουδαίοις τάδε πρῶτα τεθέσπικε πιστοῖς → Peter has laid down the following first writing for the Jewish faithful
English (LSJ)
ωνος, ὁ, = γάστρις, pot-belly, Alc.37 B, Ar.Ra.200, Ph. 1.686.
Spanish (DGE)
-ωνος
barrigudo de donde glotón, tragaldabas de Pítaco, Alc.429.5, de Dioniso, Ar.Ra.200, de Ulpiano, comensal en la cena de los Deipnosofistas, Ath.97c, 125b, 270d, 401b, 697b, cf. Ph.1.686, AP 8.172 (Gr.Naz.), Eust.402.13
•como tít. de una comedia de Antífanes Κνοιθιδεὺς ἢ γάστρων Cnetideo o el glotón Ath.448e.
German (Pape)
[Seite 476] ωνος, ὁ, Dickbauch, Ar. Ran. 202 u. Sp., wie Ath. III, 97 c.
French (Bailly abrégé)
ωνος (ὁ) :
homme pansu, càd gourmand, goulu.
Étymologie: γαστήρ.
Dutch (Woordenboekgrieks.nl)
γάστρων -ωνος, ὁ γαστήρ dikbuik, dikzak.
Russian (Dvoretsky)
γάστρων: ωνος ὁ Arph., Diog. L. = γάστρις.
Greek Monolingual
γάστρων, ο (Α) γαστήρ
ο κοιλαράς.
Greek Monotonic
γάστρων: -ωνος, ὁ = γάστρις, «κοιλαράς», σε Αριστοφ.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
γάστρων: -ωνος, ὁ, =γάστρις, κοιλαρᾶς, Ἀλκαῖ. 6, Ἀριστοφ. Βατρ. 200.
Middle Liddell
Translations
gluttonous
Albanian: hamës; Arabic: نَهِم, شَرِه; Armenian: որկրամոլ; Bulgarian: ненаситен, чревоугоднически; Catalan: golós; Chinese Cantonese: 為食, 为食; Mandarin: 貪嘴, 贪嘴, 暴食的, 饞, 馋; Czech: nenasytný; Dutch: vraatzuchtig; Estonian: ablas, ahne; Finnish: ahnas; French: glouton, gourmand, goulu; Friulian: golôs; Galician: comellón, lambón, lambaz, galdrumeiro; German: gefräßig, unersättlich; Greek: λαίμαργος; Ancient Greek: ἀδδηφάγος, ἀδηφάγος, ἀριστητής, ἀριστητικός, βορός, γαστερόπληξ, γαστρίμαργος, γάστρις, γαστροβόρος, γάστρων, γάστωρ, γλίσχρων, δουλογάστριος, ἐδώς, ἐνθεσίδουλος, ἐνθεσίψωμος, λάβρος, λαίμαργος, λίχνος, μάργος, μαργῶν, ψωμόδουλος; Japanese: 飽くなき; Kabuverdianu: laskadu, guloze, gulós; Latin: edax, gulosus, lurcinabundus; Maori: pukukai, homanga, honekai, pūkino; Ottoman Turkish: اوبور, قورساقسز; Portuguese: guloso, glutão; Romanian: mâncăcios; Russian: прожорливый, ненасытный; Scottish Gaelic: craosach, gionach; Spanish: glotón, goloso, garoso; Turkish: obur; Ukrainian: ненажерливий