Terpo^otaw? 



537 



T^VKaVKTT-qplOV 



TeTpaxoiaios. a. ov, (x°"^) Containing or holding four xoes. 



Inscr. 3071. 

 TeTpawStov, ov. ro, (ciSf)) a Kavwv consisting of four aSal, 



TfTpaa&of. Theoph. Cont. 365, 23. 



TfTpaaSov, ov, to, = Trr/jaa)8ioj'. TheOPH. CoN'T. 705. 

 TfTpripTfs, eof, fj, (rirrapfs) qiiadriremis. POLTB. 1, 



47, 5. 



T€xv'i-n}s, ov, 6, great adept in any ai-t. Pokph. Adm. 

 232, 8. 



Tfx''o^oy''<'. <": Vi {rexyoKoyos) grammatical analysis, 

 parsing. Plut. II, 514 A. 



rfdyya, ar, 17, tzanga, zanca, z an ch a, ioo?, Tfayyiw. 

 Gloss. Juk. Tfdyya, TO vTToSrjpa. [The boots of the 

 Byzantine emperor, as also those of the king of 

 Persia, were made of red leather. None of their 

 subjects were allowed to wear red boots. Peoc. Ill, 

 247, 14. Cede. II, 47, 14. With regard to the 

 etjinology of Tfdyya, we observe here, that, as its 

 distinctive portion is the leg or tube, that is, the part 

 protecting the shank, it is natural to connect it with 

 the Swedish skank, Anglo-Saxon scanc, German 

 Schenkel, English shank. For the change of 

 2K into TZ, compare TreT^lv, r^pos, r^amov, from 



TT((TKOS, <rKip6s, O-KajTTOJ.] 



Tfayydpijr, i;, o, = r^ayyapios. PtOCH. 1, 114. 144. 

 T^ayyapiov, ov, to, (r^ay^as) hoot-malcer's shop. TheOPH. 

 279, 10. 



Tfayydpior, ov, 6, (r^ayya) boot-maker, T^dyKas, T^ayyas, 

 T^ayyapi]!, o-ayydpios. POEPH. Cer. 494, 10. 



T^ayyas. a, 6, = T^ayydpios, applied only to the emperor's 

 boot-maker. Cukop. 31, 14. (See also Tfdyicar.) 



T^ayylov, ov, to, = Tfdyya. ChrON. 614, 5. Theoph. 



260, 4, et alibi. 

 rCdyKas = rCayySs. CuROP. 82, 12. 19. 

 Tfmo-at, incorrectly for TfaiVio, caesio. Porph. Them. 



32, 10. 



Tfato-ap, V. 1. TfeVap, Caesar, Kata-ap. CeDR. II, 466. 



Tfdn-faXor, o, Arabic vrij^j mean, ragged and dirty. 

 Callist. 18, 52, an epithet given to Jacobus the 

 Monophysite. 



Substantively, to T^dm^oKov, ragged and dirty gar- 

 ment. Ptoch. p. 49. 



T^aniov, ov, to, (aKanavr)) rnattocl: PoRPH. Cer. 660. 



(See also TCdwa, in the Appendix.) 

 T^fp^ov'Kiavos, ov, 6, one icho wears T^ip^ov\a. Porph. 



Adra. 153. 

 Tff'p/SouXoc, TO, ^ irep^ovXov. Implied in T^ip^ovXiavos, 



which see. (See also Tftp/SouX*, in the Appendix.) 

 T^epyd, Turkish hath. PoRrn. Cer. 466 AouTpov Tovp- 



KiKov, jjyovv 'S.KvdiKov T^fpya. 



TCJjpos, ov, 6, (^rjpos, a-Kipos) dried scomber. Theoph. 

 CoNT. 339, 12, as a surname. Ptoch. 1, 96, incor- 

 rectly Tripos. Id. 2, 201. 



TC'^ira No'^a, 17. Civita Nova. PoEPH. Adm. 125. 



T^iKovpiov =z (TtKovpiov. Leo. 5, 3. 6, 11, Bt alibi. 

 Porph. Cer. 524, 3. 



T^iT^aKiov, ov, TO, a kind of garment. Porph. Cer. 22, 

 19. [If connected with the Turkish 3;i J (J like ;«^), 

 flower, av6os, this garment may be imagined to have 

 been ornamented with figures of flowers. Compare 

 the Hebrew V^"^, floicer ; wing: l^^^li, forelock; 

 fringe, tassel.'] 



tCokos, ov, d, (Persian Jll^NJI, tsha-kudzh, or JOJ, 

 tsha-Mdzh, hammer) a kind of sledge-hammer for 

 breaking stones. Porph. Cer. 660. 



T^ovKama-pa, otos, to, (as if from T^ovKavi(a>) goff-stick 

 and ball, a game. Cedr. II, 480, 14, as a v. ]. 



T^avKavKTTTipiov = TCvKavurrrjpiov. Theoph. 688, 7, as a 

 proper name. Porph. Cer. 557, 11. Theoph. 

 Cont. 144, 13. 



T^ovK^o), to smoke, to hang in smoke, as a punishment. 

 Leg. Homer. 97 UvpnoKdadaa-av, TOVTcari Tfouxfco-^w- 

 irav ; just as if T^ovK^iardaxrav was more Common than 

 ■irvpTto\(l<T0acrav. [Compare the Persian Dpji*, sukt, 

 ^P, [DDVw, Katfiv, flJi^, KaviTis, heat, Slavic o-ozhi;- 

 yd-iou (in four syllables), equivalent to KaraKaia. 

 See also T^oufw in the Appendix.^ 



tCSxo, as, 17, Persian {^O^J (J Uke ish), Arabic 0")J1, 

 woollen cloth. Apoor. Thom. Euangel. A, 8, in the 

 various readings. [See also Tfdxa, X€po)/j€»'OTfo';(os', in 

 the Appendix.] 



TivKavtarfjptv for T^VKan<rn)piov. TheopH. Coxt. 438 



22. 

 TfuKawoT^ptoi', ov, t6, court for playing goff-stick and 



