Δείναρχος
ἤ με φίλει καθαρὸν θέμενος νόον, ἤ μ' ἀποειπών ἐχθαιρ' ἀμφαδίην νεῖκος ἀειράμενος → either love me with a pure heart, or reject and hate me, and openly pick a fight
Spanish (DGE)
-ου, ὁ
Dinarco
1 hijo de Sóstrato, orador aten. de origen corintio, IV a.C., D.18.295, Call.Fr.446, 447, D.H.Din.2.2, 3.4, Plu.2.850b, Dem.31, Sud., Din., I.
2 orador corintio, partidario de Antípatro, D.Ep.6, Plu.Phoc.33, Tim.21.
3 poeta e historiador delio del IV a.C., Demetr.Magn. en D.H.Din.1, Dinarchus, I.
4 cretense, D. en D.H.Din.1.
5 pitagórico de Paros, Iambl.VP 257, 267.
6 otro AP 11.169.
Russian (Dvoretsky)
Δείναρχος: ὁ Динарх (уроженец Коринфа, последний из 10 крупнейших атт. ораторов; IV-III вв. до н. э.) Dem., Plut.
Wikipedia EN
Dinarchus or Dinarch (Greek: Δείναρχος; Corinth, c. 361 – c. 291 BC) was a logographer (speechwriter) in Ancient Greece. He was the last of the ten Attic orators included in the "Alexandrian Canon" compiled by Aristophanes of Byzantium and Aristarchus of Samothrace in the third century BC.
A son of Sostratus (or, according to the Suda, Socrates), Dinarchus settled at Athens early in life, and when not more than twenty-five was already active as a logographer—a writer of speeches for the law courts. As a metic, he was unable to take part in the debates. He had been the pupil both of Theophrastus and of Demetrius Phalereus, and had early acquired a certain fluency and versatility of style.
Translations
ca: Dinarc d'Atenes; de: Deinarchos; el: Δείναρχος; en: Dinarchus; eo: Dinarĥo; es: Dinarco; et: Deinarchos; fi: Deinarkhos; fr: Dinarque; gl: Dinarco de Atenas; hu: Deinarkhón; id: Dinarkhos; is: Deinarkos; it: Dinarco; ko: 디나르쿠스; la: Dinarchus; nl: Dinarchus; pl: Dejnarchos; ru: Динарх; sh: Dinarh; uk: Дінарх; zh: 纳尔科斯