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Henry George Liddell. Robert Scott. A Greek-English Lexicon. Revised and augmented throughout by:
Sir Henry Stuart Jones; with the assistance of: Roderick McKenzie. Oxford. Clarendon Press. 1940.
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ἴεσις , εως, ἡ, ( εἶμι) .... [ iesis / eos / e / (eimi) ]
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κι_νέω,
[ ki neo ] aor. ἐκίνησα
[ ekinesa ], Ep.
A. “ κίνησα”
Il.23.730, etc.:—Med. and Pass., fut. κινήσομαι (in pass. sense)
Pl.Tht.182c,
D.9.51, - ηθήσομαι
Ar.Ra. 796,
Pl.R.545d, etc.: aor. Med. (Ep.) “ κινήσαντο”
Opp.C.2.582: aor. Pass. ἐκινήθην, Ep.3pl. “ ἐκίνηθεν”
Il.16.280: (cf. κίω):— set in motion, ἄγε
κινήσας, of Hermes leading the souls,
Od.24.5; simply, move,
“ κ.
ὅπλα”
Th.1.82; κ.
σκάφην rock a cradle,
Phylarch.36 J.
b.
in later Gr., set in motion a process of law, etc.,
<= To: kinesis ||
B. Pass., to be put in motion, go, Il.1.47; <κι>νηθεὶς ἐπῄει dub. in
Pi.Fr.101: generally, to be moved, stir,
κινήθη
ἀγορή, ἐκίνηθεν
φάλαγγες,
Il.2.144,
16.280;
[...;] what motion is this?
E.Andr.1226 (anap.); κινεῖσθαι, opp. ἑστάναι, motion, opp. rest,
Pl. Sph.250b, etc.; ὥσπερ
χορδαὶ
ἐν
λύρᾳ
συμπαθῶς
κινηθεῖσαι vibrating in unison,
Plot.4.4.8.
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