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Search results for alpha,3566 in Adler number:
Headword:
Apostugountes
Adler number: alpha,3566
Translated headword: abhorring, loathing
Vetting Status: high
Translation: [Meaning they] hating.[1]
Josephus [writes]: "
Antiochus having abhorred [...]".[2]
"Fabricius was appointed commander for the war against Pyrrhus. For when the armies were facing each other, a certain man who was on night watch approached Fabricius and offered to kill Pyrrhus with noxious poison if Fabricius would make it financially worth his while. Fabricius loathed this man for the attempt and sent him to Pyrrhus in chains. Pyrrhus was of course astonished at the action and is said to have cried out: 'This man is a true Fabricius, whom it is more difficult for someone to turn aside from his native virtue than the sun from its accustomed orbit'."[3]
Greek Original:Apostugountes: misountes. Iôsêpos: Antiochos apostugêsas. Phabrikios hêgemôn kathistatai tou pros ton Purron polemou. antikathezomenôn gar allêlois tôn stratopedôn, nuktôr phulaxas tis hôs ton Phabrikion aphikneitai dêlêtêriôi pharmakôi anelein ton Purron huphistamenos, ên tis dotheiê pros autou chrêmatôn ôpheleia. hon ho Phabrikios apostugêsas tês epicheirêseôs apopempei tôi Purrôi desmion. agastheis dê to prachthen ho Purros anaboêsai legetai: houtos esti kai ouk allos Phabrikios, hon duscheresteron an tis paratrepsoi tês oikeias aretês ê tês sunêthous poreias ton hêlion.
Notes:
[1] The headword is present participle, masculine nominative plural, of the verb
a)postuge/w. Same glossing in other lexica; evidently quoted from somewhere (probably, as claimed by Latte on
Hesychius s.v., the
New Testament:
Romans 12.9).
[2] No such phrase is attested in
Josephus (or indeed anywhere else).
[3] cf.
Plutarch,
Pyrrhus 21, and Eutropius,
Breviarium 2.14; cf.
upsilon 734 and esp.
phi 5. The participants in this celebrated anecdote from the 280s BCE are Pyrrhus, King of Epirus (on campaign in southern Italy), and the Roman consul C. Fabricius Luscinus. See generally OCD(4) p.566.
Keywords: biography; Christianity; definition; dialects, grammar, and etymology; ethics; historiography; history; medicine; military affairs; religion
Translated by: Jennifer Benedict on 7 July 2001@00:57:35.
Vetted by:
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