σποδός
ἄνδρες τεθνᾶσιν ἐκ χερῶν αὐτοκτόνων → the men are dead, murdered by their very own hands | dead are our chiefs by fratricidal hands | by kindred hands and mutual murder slain | their hands have killed each other
English (LSJ)
ἡ,
A wood-ashes, embers, Od.9.375, h.Merc.238: generally, ashes, Hdt.2.140; ἐπ' Ἰσμηνοῦ τε μαντεία σ., of the ashes of an altar, S.OT21, cf. Ant.1007, Hdt.4.35; σ. ἱερὰ ἡ ἐκ τοῦ βωμοῦ SIG1171.18 (Lebena); of the dead, A.Ag.435,443 (both lyr.), Ch.687, S.El.758, etc.; ἀμφὶ σποδὸν κάρᾳ κεχύμεθα, in sign of mourning, E.Supp.827 (lyr.), cf. 1160; σποδὸς δὲ τἄλλα, Περικλέης, Κόδρος, Κίμων Alex.25.12:—death by plunging into a room filled with ashes, αὐτήν μιν ῥῖψαι ἐς οἴκημα σποδοῦ πλέον Hdt.2.100; as a Persian punishment (cf. Val. Max.9.2.6), εἰς τὴν σποδὸν ἐμβάλλεται Ctes.Fr.29.48, cf. 51, al., LXX 2 Ma.13.5 sq.—There seems to be no difference in sense between σποδός and τέφρα: both occur in Trag., the latter alone in Att. Prose. II dust, τῆς χαμᾶθεν σποδοῦ Hdt.4.172; μετρεῖν τὴν σ., of labour in vain, Arr.Epict.3.26.17. III oxide of certain metals, σ. Κυπρίη copper oxide, Hp.Mul.1.104; σ. Ἰλλυριῶτις Id.Ulc.13; σ. χρυσῖτις Id.Mul.1.103, cf. Dsc.5.75. IV metaph., κυλίκων, πίθων σ., of a bibulous old woman, 'soaker', 'sponge', AP 6.291, 7.455 (Leon.). V lava, Str.6.2.3.