rower

From LSJ

ξυνῆλθεν ἀτταγᾶς τε καὶ νουμήνιος → birds of a feather flock together, the francolin and the new-moon bird get together

Source

English > Greek (Woodhouse)

Woodhouse page for rower - Opens in new window

substantive

Ar. and P. ἐρέτης, ὁ. P. πρόσκωπος, ὁ, V. κώπης ἄναξ, ὁ (Euripides, Cyclops 86), ἐρετμοῦ ἐπιστάτης, ὁ (Euripides, Helen 1267).

in warships were three tiers of rowers: (1) θρανῖται, οἱ, (2) ζυγῖται, οἱ, (3 ) θαλάμιοι, οἱ.

Translations

Azerbaijani: avarçı, avarçəkən, kürəkçi; Bulgarian: гребец; Catalan: remador, remer; Chinese Mandarin: 划手; Czech: veslař; Esperanto: remisto sg; Finnish: soutaja; French: rameur; Galician: remador, remeiro; Georgian: მენიჩბე; German: Ruderer; Greek: κωπηλάτης; Ancient Greek: ἐλατήρ, ἐπίκωπος, ἐρέτης, κωπηλάτης, νεηλάτης, πρόπολος, πρόσκωπος, ὑπηρέτας, ὑπηρέτης; Hebrew: חוֹתֵר‎, מְשׁוֹטָאי‎; Hungarian: evezős; Irish: iomróir; Italian: rematore, rematrice; Latin: remex; Maori: kaihoe; Norwegian Bokmål: roer; Old English: rōwend; Ottoman Turkish: كوركجی‎; Polish: wioślarz, wioślarka, bębniarz; Portuguese: remador, remeiro; Romanian: vâslaș, vâslitor, canotor; Russian: гребец; Spanish: remero, remador, boga, bogador; Tagalog: manggagaod; Turkish: kürekçi