γερόντιον

From LSJ

πάλιν δ' ὅ γε λάζετο μῦθον → he took back his speech, he retracted his speech, he altered his speech

Source
Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: γερόντιον Medium diacritics: γερόντιον Low diacritics: γερόντιον Capitals: ΓΕΡΟΝΤΙΟΝ
Transliteration A: geróntion Transliteration B: gerontion Transliteration C: gerontion Beta Code: gero/ntion

English (LSJ)

τό, Dim. of γέρων,
A little old man, Hp.Ep.13, Ar.Ach.993, X.An.6.3.22, Theoc.4.58, Luc.Bacch.3.
II the Carthaginian Senate, Plb.6.51.2 (v.l. γεροντικόν).

Spanish (DGE)

-ου, τό
1 vejete, viejo Ar.Ach.993, Eq.42, X.An.6.3.22, Hp.Ep.13, Theoc.4.58, Luc.Bacch.3.
2 el Senado cartaginés, Plb.6.51.2.

German (Pape)

[Seite 486] τό, dim. von γέρων, altes Männchen, Ar. Ach. 947; Equ. 42; Eubul. Ath. XV, 685 e u. A.

French (Bailly abrégé)

ου (τό) :
petit vieillard.
Étymologie: γέρων.

Dutch (Woordenboekgrieks.nl)

γερόντιον -ου, τό γέρων oud mannetje.

Russian (Dvoretsky)

γερόντιον: τό
1 старичок Arph., Plut.;
2 совет старейшин (Polyb. - v.l. γεροντικόν).

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

γερόντιον: τό, ὑποκορ. τοῦ γέρων, «γεροντάκι» ἢ «γεροντάκος», μικρὸς γέρων, Ἀριστοφ. Ἀχ. 993, Ξεν. Ἀν. 6. 3, 22. ΙΙ. τῶν Καρχηδονίων ἡ γερουσία, Πολύβ. 6. 51, 2, μετὰ καὶ ἄλλης πιθανωτ. γραφῆς γεροντικόν.

Greek Monotonic

γερόντιον: τό, υποκορ. του γέρων, γεροντάκος, γεροντάκι, σε Αριστοφ., Ξεν.

Middle Liddell

[Dim. of γέρων
a little old man, Ar., Xen.

Translations

old man

Abkhaz: аҭаҳмада; Ainu: ヘンケ; Albanian: plak; Alutor: ынпыӄлавул; Arabic: شَيْخ, عَجُوز; Egyptian Arabic: عجوز; Armenian: ծերունի, ծերուկ, պառավ; Aromanian: mosh, bitãrnu, aush, tot, pap; Azerbaijani: qoca, qoca kişi, ağsaqqal; Bashkir: ҡарт; Basque: agure; Belarusian: стары, дзед, старац, старык; Bulgarian: старец, дядо; Burmese: အဘိုးကြီး, အဘိုးအို; Chinese Dungan: лохан; Mandarin: 老漢, 老汉, 老頭兒, 老头儿, 老人; Czech: stařec; Danish: olding; Darkinjung: ngarrombai; Esperanto: maljunulo, oldulo; Estonian: vanamees, ätt; Evenki: этыркэн; Finnish: ukko, äijä, jäärä, vanha mies; French: vieillard, vieil homme, vieux, vieux monsieur; Galician: vello, ancián, vellote, vedraño; Georgian: მოხუცი; German: Greis, Alter, alter Mann, Väterchen; Greek: γέρος, γέροντας; Ancient Greek: γέρων, πελλᾶς, πρεῖγυς, πρέσβυς, πρεσβύτας, πρεσβύτης; Hindi: बूढ़ा; Hungarian: öregember; Ilocano: lakay; Indonesian: pak tua; Ingrian: äijä, ukko, starikka; Irish: seanduine, seanfhear; Italian: vecchio; Japanese: お爺さん, 親父, 親爺, 老爺, 爺, 老人; Kaingang: kófa; Kazakh: қарт, шал, қария, ақсақал; Khmer: អ្នកចាស់; Kikuyu: mũthee; Korean: 노인(老人), 할아버지, 로인(老人); Kurdish Central Kurdish: پیرەمێرد; Northern Kurdish: pîremêr; Kyrgyz: абышка, чал, карыя, аксакал, карт; Latin: senex, vetulus; Latvian: vecis; Ligurian: vêgio; Lithuanian: senis, senelis, senukas; Macedonian: старец; Malayalam: വയസ്സൻ, വൃദ്ധൻ, വയോധികന്; Manchu: ᠮᠠᡶᠠ; Maore Comorian: ɓakoko; Mon: လ ထဴ; Mongolian Cyrillic: өвгөн; Nanai: мапа; Ndzwani Comorian: ɓako; Ngarrindjeri: yandiorn; Ngazidja Comorian: mndru-mɓaye; Nivkh: ӿемар; Nogai: карт; Northern Ohlone: húntáts; Norwegian Bokmål: gamling, olding; Ojibwe: akiwenzii; Persian: پیرمرد; Polish: starzec, staruszek, dziadek, stary; Portuguese: velho, idoso, velhote; Quechua: awki, machu, macu, aukin; Romanian: moș; Russian: старик, старичок, дед, дедушка, старец, пожилой человек; Scots: bodach; Scottish Gaelic: bodach; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: ста̏рац; Roman: stȁrac; Shor: апшый; Sidamo: geercho; Slovak: starec; Slovene: starec; Somali: duq, oday; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: źěd; Southern Altai: абышка, таада; Spanish: viejo; Swahili: mzee; Swedish: gubbe; Tajik: мӯйсафед, куҳансол, пир, пирамард; Taos: łùłiʼína; Tatar: карт; Telugu: వృద్ధుడు; Thai: ชายชรา, ตาแก่, ลุง, แปะ, อากง; Turkish: ihtiyar; Ugaritic: 𐎌𐎁; Ukrainian: старий, старик, дід, старець; Urdu: بوڑھا; Uzbek: chol, qariya, keksa, moʻysa-fid; Vietnamese: ông già; Welsh: henwr, hynafgwr; Yagara: bud dair; Yiddish: אַלטער