V 



OV 



451 



o^vyjiov 



In tlic following prtssagc it seems to mean a circle, 

 or conceulric circles, in the floor of a great hall or 

 church. PouPii. Cer. 524, 6. 

 uv, uuTos, TO, (fiV"' "") Ix'iin/, existence. To /x?) ok, non- 

 existence, nothing. Const. ArdsT. 5, 7, 12. (See 



also '^^OVKOVTIOI.) 



uvaypos. ov, o, equivalent to oVos uypios, wild ass. Sept. 

 Ps. 103, 11. 



2. Catapulfa, KaTamXTrjs. Ltd. 158, 20. Proc. 

 n. 104, 11. 



oveiSia-fios, ov, 6, (oc€i8ifi») « rejjroachinff, rejn-oach. 

 Sept. Jos. 5, 9. 



oveihos, ov, o, = TO iWiSos. HippoL. 288, 85. Theopo. 

 CoNT. 51. 169. 



onetpoKpht]!, ov, o, interpreter of dreams, a book contain- 

 ing explanations of dreams. Porph. Cer. 467, 8. 



opeipoKpiTii, idos, tj, female interpreter of dreams. Inscr. 

 481. 



ovetpowopTTos, ov, 6, {ompov, nepna) dream-sender, a kind 

 of demon. JusT. Apol. 1, 18. HiPPOL. 176. 256. 

 Eds. 4, 7, p. 149. 



ovoKevravpa, ai, i;, femin. of ovoKiPTavpos. Ael. N. A. 

 17,9. 



ovoKiirravpos, ov, 6, (oVos, Kivravpoi) a species of tailless 

 ape. Sept. Esai. 13, 24. 



uvopa, aros, to, name. In the Greek Church a child 

 receives its name on the eighth day ; a custom bor- 

 rowed from the Jews. Eukhol. p. 122. (Compare 

 Sept. Gen. 17, 12. Lev. 12,3. NT. Luc. 1, 59. 

 2, 21. Before the introduction of Ckristianity, the 

 child received its name on the tenth day after its 

 birth. IsAE. 41, 3. Arist. Av. 922. Deji. 1000, 

 18. 1001,5. 1016, 29, et alibi.) 



El's uvopa. After the name of. Mae. 4 'Enavopaa-eu 



avrj)i' eis oifopa tov vlov ovTov ^Eva>s, He called it Enos 

 after his son. Id. 20. 



2. In the plural, duupara, names, in the sense 

 of persons. NT. Act. 1, 15. Ciial. 1409 D. 

 Apophth. Slacar. 7. Mal. 60, 20, et alibi. 



3. Nuwi, in grammar. Dion. Thrax in Bekker. 

 634, 5. 



Ilewoiijpivov ovop,a, a noun whose sound resembles 



that of the thing signified ; as 0Xoio-/9o9, po'tCos, SoCwoj. 

 Dion. Thrax in Bekker. 636, 14. 



ditopayov\os, ov, {ovos, payov^ov) asS-jawed. TheOPH. 



013, as a nickname. Nic. Const. 61, 14. 

 ovopii^a, aua, to name, in the sense of mention hy name. 



-N 1 . Act. 19, 13 ^Ovopd^eiv . ... TO ovopa tov Kvplov 

 Irjaov, to say Ef Tw oi'o^aTt tov Kvpiov 'l7]aov, K. T, X. 

 Laoi). 35 'Ovopa^eiv ayye\ovs, in praying. (Compare 

 inEOD. Ill, /22 B It/a irtdTevtapfv otl (Is TTUTfpa Ka\ 

 vioK Kal ayiov Trvivpa ^aiTTi^opeda, Kal oi;(t els ra twv 

 apxayyeXaf r^ <iyyi\uiv ouopara, i>s oi alpeTiKol, ^ i)S 

 'louSatoi f/ idviKol.) 



2. To celebrate, applaud. Theoph. 68. 



ovopauTripta, a>v, to, {ovopa^ay) the festival of one's receiv- 

 ing one's name. Greg. Naz. I, 637 B. 



ovopatTTiKr], ris, 17, (pvopaaTiKos) SC. tttSxtis, the nominative 

 case, np6^, evStla. Dion. Thrax in Bekker. 636, 5. 



dvopaTOypa(pla, us, fj, (ovopa, ypd<f)a>) list of names. SepT. 



1 Esdr. 0, II. 

 6vopaTo6!)pas, a, o, (dt]paa) word-hunter, one who uses 



rare and obsolete words. Athen. 3, 53. 55. 

 ovopiiTonoda, as, rj, (n-ou'«) the making of words. Iren. 



1,11, 4. 



ovoa-pa, aTos, to, = ovavis- DiOSC. 3, 147. 



&w^, vxos, 0, onycha, the name of an aromatic substance. 

 Sept. Ex. 30, 34. 



2. Onyx. LuciAN. Dea Syr. 32. 



3. An instrument of torture so called, perhaps 

 identical with oyKivos2, which see. Basilic. 60, 36, 

 17. Gloss. "Oi/up^fj oi ds tu fiao-avia-Ti'ipia, ftdiculae. 



oKup^i'fo), iVm, (orv|) to have the hoof cloven. Sept. Lev. 



11,3. 



2. To have the color of the onyx. Athan. II, 



116 B. 

 owxktt^P, rjpos, 6, (owp^ifia) paw of an animal. Sept. 



Lev. 11, 3. 

 ovavis, i8os, ^, the rest-harroiv, a plant. Diosc. 3, 147. 



[Modern Greek, 17 avaviha, the tall rest-harrow, 



Ononis Antiquorum.'] 

 o^iJyyioi/, ou, to, axungia, tallow, fat, a^olyyiov, XiVoj 



o-Tf'ap. Diosc. 3, 104. Gloss. 'O^uyytoK, arbina, 



unguem, unguina, arvina, axungia. 



