ἀναποδίζω

Ancient Greek

Etymology

From ᾰ̓νᾰ- (backwords) + πούς (gentive: ποδός) (foot) + -ίζω (suffix for verbs).

Pronunciation

 

Verb

ᾰ̓νᾰποδῐ́ζω (anapodízō)

  1. (intransitive) make a step backwards
  2. (transitive) call back and question, cross-examine
  3. retract what is said before
  4. return (of retrograde motion of the planets, of recurring events)

Inflection

Synonyms

  • ᾰ̓νᾰποδισμός m (anapodismós, going back; recall)
  • ᾰ̓νᾰποδιστής m (anapodistḗs, one who drives back)
  • ᾰ̓νᾰποδιστικός (anapodistikós, in retardation)
  • ᾰ̓νᾰποδόω, -ῶ (anapodóō, -ô, ἀναποδίζω, grow fresh feet)
    • ἀναποδόομαι, oῦμαι (anapodóomai, oûmai, grow fresh feet -of scorpions-)
  • ἐπᾰνᾰποδιστέον (epanapodistéon, one must re-examine)
  • ἐπᾰνᾰποδῐ́ζω (epanapodízō, retrace one's steps in argument)

Descendants

Further reading


Greek

Medieval

Pronunciation

 

Verb

ἀναποδίζω (anapodízō)

  1. (transitive) make something turn backwards
  2. (intransitive) make steps backwards
  • ἀνάποδα (anápoda, reverse, adverb)
  • ἀναποδιασμένος (anapodiasménos, with eccentric, weird appearance, participle)
  • ἀναποδογραμμένος (anapodogramménos, ill-fated, unlucky)
  • ἀναποδοκυλισμένος (anapodokulisménos, reclined and rolling)
  • ἀνάποδος (anápodos, reverse; adverse, difficult)

Descendants

References

  • ἀναποδίζω in Kriaras, Emmanuel. (n.d.) Επιτομή του Λεξικού της Μεσαιωνικής Ελληνικής Δημώδους Γραμματείας [Concise Dictionary of Medieval Vulgar Greek Literature (11001669) Vols. IXIV.] (in Greek), Online edition
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.