Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

διόγκωσις

From LSJ

Ὁ δ' ἀνεξέταστος βίος οὐ βιωτὸς ἀνθρώπῳ → The unexamined life is not worth living

Plato, Apology of Socrates 38a
Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: διόγκωσις Medium diacritics: διόγκωσις Low diacritics: διόγκωσις Capitals: ΔΙΟΓΚΩΣΙΣ
Transliteration A: diónkōsis Transliteration B: dionkōsis Transliteration C: diogkosis Beta Code: dio/gkwsis

English (LSJ)

-εως, ἡ,
A swelling, Sor.1.55, Plu.2.771b; tumour, Gal.1.185.
II diastole, Marcellin. Puls.478.

Spanish (DGE)

-εως, ἡ
medic.
1 hinchazón τῆς γαστρός Sor.39.31, μαστῶν Sor.99.19, Plu.2.771b
tumor σπληνὸς φλεγμονὴ καὶ δ. Gal.7.470, cf. 1.185.
2 diástole, dilatación del pulso, Marcellin.Puls.478.

German (Pape)

[Seite 632] ἡ, das Anschwellen, Geschwulst, Plut. amat. 25; Medic.

French (Bailly abrégé)

εως (ἡ) :
enflure, gonflement.
Étymologie: διά, ὀγκόω.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

διόγκωσις: -εως, ἡ, ἔπαρσις, κόμπος, Πλούτ. 2. 771Β· πρήξιμον, Γαλην. 2. 325., 7. 154.

Russian (Dvoretsky)

διόγκωσις: εως ἡ разбухание, вздутие, опухание (sc. τῆς σαρκός Plut.).

Translations

swelling

Armenian: այտուցվածություն, ուռուցք, այտուց; Bashkir: шеш, шешеү; Bulgarian: издуване, изпъкналост, подутина; Chinese Mandarin: 腫脹/肿胀; Czech: otok; Finnish: ajettuma, pöhö, pöhöttymä, turvotus, ajetus, turvotus, pöhötys, paisuminen; French: gonflement; Galician: inchazo, inchazón; German: Anschwellen, Anschwellung, Schwellung; Greek: πρήξιμο, διόγκωση, οίδημα; Ancient Greek: ἀποίδησις, ἄσκωμα, βύκτης, διόγκωσις, διοίδησις, ἔξαρμα, ἐξόγκωμα, ἐξόγκωσις, ἐξοίδησις, ἐπανάστημα, ἔπαρμα, ἔπαρσις, ἐποίδησις, κανθύλη, κύρτωμα, ὄγκωμα, οἴδημα, οἴδησις, οἶδμα, οἶδος, παράπρισις, παροίδησις, πρῆγμα, πρηδών, πρῆσμα, σπάργησις, τύλη; Irish: at; Italian: gonfiore, gnocco; Hungarian: duzzadás; Japanese: はれ, ふくれ, はれもの; Khmer: ហើម; Latin: tumor, tumiditas, tumentia; Maori: uruhumu, pauku, uruhua, uruumu; Ottoman Turkish: شیش‎; Pashto: ⁧غومبه⁩, ⁧پړسوب⁩; Plautdietsch: Schwolst; Polish: opuchlizna, obrzęk; Portuguese: inchaço, inchação; Romanian: umflare, umflătură; Russian: опухание, опухоль, припухлость; Scottish Gaelic: atadh; Spanish: inflamación, hinchazón; Swedish: svullnad; Tamil: தடிப்பு; Tarifit: tuffett; Telugu: వాచుట, వాపు; Tibetan: སྐྲང་ཀོ; Tocharian B: yweru; Welsh: chwydd; Westrobothnian: sullne; Uyghur: ⁧گادازا⁩, ⁧دوماق⁩, ⁧ئۇچقۇن⁩, ⁧ئۇششۇق⁩, ⁧ئىششىق