e'y;;^Li\ia^a) 



273 



6( 



cemented witll lime. SuiD. 'Zejilpay.is .... KTla-aaa 

 TToKaTia eVi l^wixuTav (y\oprjya>v r]<TCJ><iKTO)ii.(vav, IH the 



building of tvhich asphaltuni teas used for mortal- 

 (compare OT. Gen. 11, 3 And they had brick for 

 stone, and slime had they for mortar). Typic. 73, 

 p. 270. COJIN. p. 339 (Paris) "Erepov ttoKIxviov di 

 eyj^oprjyov vXrjs' ePToi tovtov darrov avr^yfipev. CODIN. 

 22, 8 'Eyxopijyouj 6oKovs. 22, 16 'Eiroirjo-f be Ka\ydl3ovs 

 iy^opTjyovs em nacrav n^v nSXiv. (See also ey;(tipios.) 



Substantively, to lyxppr)yov, loork in lime, used 

 ■with reference to walls built of stones (or other hard 

 substances) cemented with lime. Leo. 15, 73 'Atto- 



Tftx^i^etv XP^ ™ wpoa-noiriTov olKo86pr]p.a Koi ' (yxoptjya 

 luxvpii KTi^eiv avTO Ka\ oxvpov ttoiuv. PORrH. Adm. 



138 'On TO Tfl^OS ToC TOtOUTOU KOOTpOU OVTC OIVO /3lJ(Ta- 



Xmv Etrrli' lKTiiTp.ivov, ovre dwo iyxoprjyov, aXX' airo \i6a>v 

 TerpaneSUav ex""'^'^" *'* H^koe ava opyvias p.tas, ovrivis 

 tltri iivvr]pp.oiTpivoi Ka\ crvpSeScpevoi (Is dWij\ovs fiera <ji- 

 hr]pa)V iv /xoXi'/S8a) «y;^vXt«(rfieV(i)f. TYnC. 73, p. 270. 

 COJIN. I, 137, 9 Kai yap ayxov twv tovtov Tfix'^" ^'M^" 

 8i' eyxopfjyov koI p.appapuiv irakai Ta>v xpo"'^" <OKoS6pi]To. 



eyxuXiufm, aaa, (x^Xifa) tO solder. PoRrH. Adm. 138 

 OiTwts fieri tTvi>r]ppo(TpevoL Ka\ (Tvv8(dep.evoi cis aXX?}Xour 

 pCTa (riSi;pa)f eu po\lj38tf fyp^uXtatr/xei'a)!'. (Compare 

 DiOD. 2, 8 Tas TOVTav apfiovias CTrXijpou p6\i(i8ov tvrr]- 

 Kovaa.) 



ry;^<i)/za, aror, to, (eyp^oiwupi) dike. POLYU. 4, 39, 9. 



4, 40, 9. 

 iyxoipios. ov, in the following passages, seems to be the 

 prototype of eyx6pr)yos. Sept. 1 Esdr. 6, 24 o5 to 



iJ\//os TTTix^" e^rjKOVTa, TrXdros Tajx")" f^rjKOirra Sia bopav 

 \i6lvuiv ^voTotv Tpiwv, Ka\ Sojtiou ^uXi'vou £y;(;o)pi'ou 



Koivov cVos. Joseph. Ant. 11, 4, C. 

 f'Su^ioi', ov, TO, {i8a(j}os) text, passage, as of Scripture. 

 Did. Alex. 404 A. 



e^LKTOv = ^SiKTOv. DiON. Hal. II, 1021, 11 iSUrov. 



PlUT. I, 312 F. AnteC. 1, 2, 6 Ti ccmv cSiktov; 



Uav OTtep i^ olKctas (^iJcreus Kiin]6(\s opif« o /Sao-tXtuf. 

 iSpa^O) (edpa), :^= i8pi5a>, Kadl^a. IrEN. 1, 3, 5. 



i8pa<mK6s, ri, ov, (f'Spdfu) establishing, settling. Irex. 1, 



3, 5. 

 Us, hcus, an exclamation. Const. (536), 1148 C 



'Ee'f.' atifXde tls tov afiPava f 'Et's.' Treicrov tov XaoK 



o-ou .' (See also h.) ■ 

 'EffpiTTjf, ov, d, an inhabitant of Ezeron. Porph. Adm. 



220, 19, et alibi. (The Ezeritcs were Slavs.) 

 'Efepdi/, oC, TO, JSzcron, a Slavic town in Peloponnesus. 



Porph. Adm. 224,13. [As the Slavic word ?fcpo 



(neuter) means lake, it is probable that this town 



was in the immediate vicinity of the lake of Helos.'] 

 ede\oKdKT](Tis, fwr, 17, (e^eXoKaKt'ci)) wilful neglect of duty, 



wilful coivardice, (BiKoKaKui. Hence, defection, Po- 



lyb. 3, 68, 10. 5, 5, 10. 27, 13, 13. 

 edip.tov, ov, TO, (tdt/ios) due, customary share, the share 



to which one is entitled by custom. Const. Apost. 



2, 28, 2 ' A(j)opt(eaOa 8c ev tji Soxs to tm Trotfievi iQljUov, 



And let the pastor's due be set apart in the feast. 



(Compare crvv^Beia 3.) 

 idia-pos, ov, 6, ciislotn. Sept. Gen. 31, 35 Td kot 



iBio'p.ou Toiv yvvaiKav, equivalent to to KaTap.rivia. 

 IBviKos, ?), ov, (fdvos) of a nation, national. PoLYn. 30, 

 10, G. 



2. Gentile, as used in grammar. Dion. Thrax 

 in Bekker. 63 G, 11 *Oi/o/ia iOviKov, Gentile noun, a 

 national appellative ; as, Au8dr, *pv^, Kdp. 



3. Gentile, heathen, in Hebraistic and ecclesiastical 

 Greek. NT. 



iSvopvda, (OV, TO, (e^cof, fil^os) hcaflicnish fables. Const. 



Apost. 1, 6 Ti ydp o-oi koi XeiVet iv tw vopio toO dfoii 



IV €jr' CKelva Ta l6vop.v6a 6ppr]<rris ; 

 fBvos, for, TO, class, order. IxscR. 4097, 17 Tav Upav 



Idvaiv, Of the sacerdotal orders, 



2. In the plural to. edvt], the gentile nations, in 



relation to the Hebrews. Sept. Esai. 8, 9 rvure 



(6vq Ka\ rjTTuade. 11, 12 'Apfi arifieiov (Is Tu (dvq. 

 Jer. 2, 11 El dXXd^ojiTui tOvr) 6(ovs aiiTav, 

 (I, si, if, in writers of the Koman and Byzantine periods, 

 often takes the future optative instead of the aorist 

 optative. Just, (spurious) p. 526 E Et ^ifV (miro- 



Xaiur a-Kt\jfOtvTO tovs Xoyour, fif'p\^oi«-o df BiKaius Toiis 

 toCto Xf'yoiTas. EpU'II. I, 915 Kai d Kriiras tm KfKTi- 

 crpfvco dvopoios virdpp^fi, (I Kai ;(pa>^ao'i Sia<j>6pois airo 

 Koapdv TTdpdtroiTO, SOCR. 5, 8, p. 271 "Qpttrav 8( 



S><TT(, (I x/"'" KaXf'o-oi, K, T, X. Theod. IV, 214 D 



