νήλιπος

From LSJ

πολλὰ τὰ δεινὰ κοὐδὲν ἀνθρώπου δεινότερον πέλει → many things are formidable, and none more formidable than man | wonders are many, and none is more wonderful than man | many things are bad, but nothing is more atrocious than man

Source

French (Bailly abrégé)

ος, ον :
1 qui va sans chaussures, nu-pieds;
2 p. ext. pauvre.
Étymologie: , ἦλιψ ; cf. νηλίπους.

Greek Monolingual

νήλιπος, -ον (Α)
νηλίπους.
[ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. Πρόκειται πιθ. για συνθ. λ. με α' συνθετικό το στερ. πρόθημα νη- και β' συνθετικό τη λ. ἦλιψ «είδος δωρικού παπουτσιού» (βλ. και λ. νηλίπους)].

Translations

Alemannic German: barfießich; Arabic: حَافِي‎, حَافٍ‎; Egyptian Arabic: حافي‎; Hijazi Arabic: حفيان‎; Moroccan Arabic: حفيان‎; Armenian: բոբիկ; Aromanian: discultsu, discults; Azerbaijani: ayaqyalın, yalınayaq, ayağı çılpaq; Bashkir: ялан аяҡ; Breton: diarc'hen, divotoù; Bulgarian: бос; Catalan: descalç; Chinese Mandarin: 赤腳, 赤脚, 光腳, 光脚; Corsican: scalzu; Czech: bosý; Danish: barfodet; Dutch: barrevoets, blootsvoets; English: barefoot, barefooted, discalceate, discalced, shoeless, unshoed, unshod; Esperanto: nudpieda; Faroese: berføttur, berbeinaður, berleggjaður; Finnish: paljasjalkainen; French: pieds nus; Friulian: discolç; Galician: descalzo; German: barfuß, barfüßig; Greek: ξυπόλυτος; Ancient Greek: ἄβλαυτος, ἄδετος, ἀνάλιπος, ἀνήλιπος, ἀνηλίπους, ἀνάρβυλος, ἀπέδιλος, ἀπεδίλωτος, γυμνοπόδης, ἀνυπόδητος, ἀνυποδήματος, γυμνός, γυμνόπους, γυμνοσάνδαλος, νήλιπος, νηλίπους, νηλίπεζος, ζάγρος, νήπους, λευκόπους; Hebrew: יחף‎; Hungarian: mezítlábas; Icelandic: berfættur; Indonesian: telanjang kaki; Irish: cosnochta; Italian: scalzo, a piedi nudi; Japanese: 裸足, 素足; Kazakh: жалаңаяқ; Korean: 맨발의; Kurdish Northern Kurdish: xwas, lingxwas, nigxwas, pêxwas, pîxwas; Ladin: deschëuz; Luxembourgish: baarbes; Malay: kaki ayam; Maltese: ħafi, ħafja, ħafjin; Maori: kore hū; Navajo: ké tʼáágééd; Neapolitan: scauzo; Norwegian Bokmål: barbeint; Old English: bærfōt; Persian: پابرهنه‎; Plautdietsch: boaft; Polish: bosy; Portuguese: descalço, descalça; Romanian: desculț; Russian: босо́й, необу́тый, босоно́гий; Sardinian: iscultzu, isciurtzu, iscurtzu, iscúlciu, iscrutzu, iscursu, iscurtu; Scots: barefit; Scottish Gaelic: casruisgte; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: бо̑с; Roman: bȏs; Sicilian: scàusu; Slovene: bos; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: bósy, bósučki; Spanish: descalzo, chuña, a pies pelados; Swedish: barfota; Tagalog: yapak; Tashelhit: ⵃⴼⵢⴰⵏ; Tibetan: རྐང་རྗེན་མ; Turkish: yalınayak; Ukrainian: бо́сий, босоно́гий; Uyghur: يالاڭئاياق‎; Venetian: descalso, descalço, descals, descolzh, descolz; Volapük: nüdafutik; Walloon: a pîs dischås, a pîs dschås; Welsh: troednoeth; Yiddish: באָרוועס‎