πεδοστιβής

From LSJ

ἀμήχανον δὲ παντὸς ἀνδρὸς ἐκμαθεῖν ψυχήν τε καὶ φρόνημα καὶ γνώμην, πρὶν ἂν ἀρχαῖς τε καὶ νόμοισιν ἐντριβὴς φανῇ → hard it is to learn the mind of any mortal or the heart, 'till he be tried in chief authority | it is impossible to know fully any man's character, will, or judgment, until he has been proved by the test of rule and law-giving

Source
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Full diacritics: πεδοστῐβής Medium diacritics: πεδοστιβής Low diacritics: πεδοστιβής Capitals: ΠΕΔΟΣΤΙΒΗΣ
Transliteration A: pedostibḗs Transliteration B: pedostibēs Transliteration C: pedostivis Beta Code: *pedostibh/s

English (LSJ)

πεδοστιβές,
A earth-treading, opp. πτεροῦς, A.Supp.1000; ὄχος, πούς, E.Med. 1123, Hel.1516; ηὕδομεν πεδοστιβεῖς Id.Rh.763 (s.v.l.).
2 on foot, opp. ἱππηλάτης, λεώς A.Pers.127 (lyr.).

German (Pape)

[Seite 542] ές, den Boden betretend; λεώς, im Gegensatz der Reiter, Aesch. Pers. 125; κνώδαλα, im Gegensatz der πτεροῦντα, der Vögel, Suppl. 978; ὄχος, Eur. Med. 1123, auf dem Lande; πούς, Hel. 1532; auch εὕδομεν πεδοστιβεῖς, auf der Erde, Rhes. 763; sp. D.

French (Bailly abrégé)

ής, ές :
qui foule le sol, qui marche sur le sol.
Étymologie: πέδον, στείβω.

Dutch (Woordenboekgrieks.nl)

πεδοστιβής -ές [πέδον, στείβω] over de aarde lopend. te voet.

Russian (Dvoretsky)

πεδοστῐβής:
1 идущий по земле, сухопутный (ὄχος Eur.);
2 пеший (λεώς Aesch.): πεδοστιβεῖ ποδί Eur. пешком по земле;
3 наземный (κνώδαλα Aesch.): εὕδομεν πεδοστιβεῖς Eur. мы спим на земле.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

πεδοστῐβής: -ές, ὁ πατῶν τὴν γῆν, ἀντίθετον τῷ πτεροῦς, Αἰσχ. Ἱκέτ. 1000· ὄχος, ποὺς Εὐρ. Μήδ. 1123, Ἑλ. 1516· εὕδειν π. ὁ αὐτ. ἐν Ρήσ. 763· - πεζὸς, ἐν ἀντιθέσει πρὸς τὸ ἱππηλάτης, Αἰσχύλ. Πέρσ. 127.

Greek Monolingual

-ές, Α
1. αυτός που βαδίζει πάνω στη γη, που πατά τη γη
2. ο πεζός.
[ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. < πέδον «έδαφος» + -στιβής (< στίβος < στείβω «πατώ, βαδίζω»), πρβλ. ηλιοστιβής].

Greek Monotonic

πεδοστῐβής: -ές (στιβεῖν), αυτός που πατά στη γη, σε Ευρ.· πεζό, αντίθ. προς το ἱππηλάτης, σε Αισχύλ.

Middle Liddell

πεδοστῐβής, ές στιβεῖν
earth-treading, Eur.:— on foot, opp. to ἱππηλάτης, Aesch.

English (Woodhouse)

treading the earth, walking the earth, walking the ground

⇢ Look up on Google | Wiktionary | LSJ full text search (Translation based on the reversal of Woodhouse's English to Ancient Greek dictionary)

Translations

on foot

Arabic: مَاشِيًا‎; Armenian: ոտքով, հետիոտն; Avar: лъелго; Azerbaijani: piyada, gəzə-gəzə; Bashkir: йәйәү; Belarusian: пешшу, пяшком, пехатой; Bulgarian: пеш, пеша; Catalan: a peu; Chinese Mandarin: 徒步, 走路, 步行; Crimean Tatar: cayav; Czech: pěšky; Danish: til fods; Dutch: te voet; Esperanto: piede; Estonian: jala; Finnish: jalan, jalkaisin; French: à pied; Galician: a pé; Georgian: ფეხით, ქვეითად; German: zu Fuß, auf Schusters Rappen; Greek: με τα πόδια; Ancient Greek: πεζῇ; Hebrew: בָּרֶגֶל‎, רַגְלִי‎; Hindi: पैदल; Hungarian: gyalog; Icelandic: ganga, fótgangandi; Ido: pedirante; Irish: de chois, de shiúl cos, de shiúl na gcos; Italian: a piedi; Japanese: 歩いて, 徒歩で; Kalmyk: йовһар; Kazakh: жаяу, жаяулап; Korean: 걸어서; Kyrgyz: жөө; Latin: pedes; Latvian: kājām; Lithuanian: pėsčiomis; Macedonian: пешки; Manx: ry-chosh; Maori: pakituri, haere pakituri; Mapudungun: namutu; Norwegian Bokmål: til fots; Nynorsk: til fots; Old English: on fōtum; Persian: پیاده‎; Polish: pieszo, na piechotę, piechotą; Portuguese: a pé; Romanian: pe jos; Russian: пешком, пешочком; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: пе̏шке̄, пје̏шке̄; Roman: pȅškē, pjȅškē; Sicilian: a pedi; Slovak: pešo; Slovene: peš; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: pěšy; Spanish: a pie; Swedish: till fots; Tajik: пиёда; Tatar: җәяү; Turkish: yayan; Turkmen: pyýada; Ukrainian: пі́шки, піхотою, пі́хом; Urdu: پیدل‎; Uzbek: yayov, piyoda; Vietnamese: đi bộ, đi chân, cuốc bộ; Welsh: ar eich deudroed, ar gerdded