τρίναξ
μὴ δὶς πρὸς τὸν αὐτὸν λίθον πταίειν → do not stumble twice on the same stone
English (LSJ)
ᾰκος, ἡ, (ἀκή (A)) like θρῖναξ, three-pronged mattock, AP6.104 (Phil.) [where ι is short].
German (Pape)
[Seite 1144] ακος, ἡ, der Dreizack, Philp. 14 (VI, 104), ξυλίνας.
French (Bailly abrégé)
ακος (ἡ) :
c. θρῖναξ.
Russian (Dvoretsky)
τρίναξ: ᾰκος (ῐ) ἡ трезубые вилы Anth.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
τρίναξ: -ᾰκος, ὁ, (ἀκὴ) ὡς τὸ θρῖναξ, κοινῶς «θρινάκι», ἐργαλεῖον γεωργικὸν ξύλινον, Ἀνθ. Π. 6. 104 [[[ἔνθα]] τὸ ι βραχύ].
Greek Monolingual
-ακος, ἡ, Α
γεωργικό εργαλείο που είχε τρεις αιχμές.
[ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. Άλλος τ. της λ. θρίναξ (Ι), κατ' επίδραση του τρι-].
Greek Monotonic
τρίναξ: [ῐ], -ᾰκος, ἡ (ἀκή), τρίαινα ή γεωργικό εργαλείο με τρεις αιχμές, τρικράνι ή πιρούνα, σε Ανθ.
Middle Liddell
τρῐ́ναξ, ακος, [ἀκή]
a trident or three-pronged mattock, Anth.
Translations
Basque: hiruhortz; Bengali: ত্রিশূল; Breton: forh a dri biz; Bulgarian: тризъбец; Catalan: trident; Chinese Mandarin: 三叉戟; Crimean Tatar: trızub; Czech: trojzubec; Dutch: drietand; Esperanto: tridento; Finnish: atrain; French: trident; Galician: tridente; Georgian: სამკაპი, სამკბილა; German: Dreizack; Greek: τρίαινα; Ancient Greek: τρίαινα, θρῖναξ, τρίναξ, τριόδους, ἰχθύκεντρον, αἰχμὴ τρίγλυφος, ἄορ τριγλώχιν; Gujarati: ત્રિશૂળ; Hindi: त्रिशूल; Hungarian: háromágú szigony, tridens; Icelandic: þríforkur; Ido: tridento; Indonesian: trisula; Irish: trírinn, adhal; Italian: tridente; Japanese: 三叉槍; Kannada: ತ್ರಿಶೂಲ; Khmer: ត្រីសូល៍; Korean: 삼지창; Latin: fuscina, tridens; Latvian: trijzobs; Lithuanian: trišakis; Macedonian: тризабец; Malay: serampang, trisula; Malayalam: ത്രിശൂലം; Marathi: त्रिशूळ; Nepali: त्रिशूल; Norwegian: trefork; Occitan: trident; Persian: شل; Polish: trójząb; Portuguese: tridente; Russian: трезубец; Sanskrit: त्रिशूल; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: трозубац; Roman: trozubac; Sinhalese: ත්රිශූලය; Slovene: trizob; Spanish: tridente; Swahili: tridenti; Swedish: treudd; Telugu: త్రిశూలం, త్రిశూలము; Thai: ตรีศูล; Turkish: trident; Ukrainian: тризубець, тризуб; Vietnamese: đinh ba; Welsh: tryfer