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ojrgistevon , verb. Adj., one must be angry, Dem.

o[rguia, ojrguiav, ojrguiav

o[rguia± or ojrguiav , Ion. -hv, h`", hJ , ( ojrevgw , cf. ajguiav ):— the length of the outstretched arms, about 6 feet, or 1 fathom, Hom., Hdt. (who says that 100 ojrguiaiv make one stadium). Hence ojrguiai`o"

ojrguiai`o"

ojrguiai`o" , a, on , six feet long or large, Anth.

o[regma

o[regma , ato", tov , ( ojrevgw ) an outstretching, Aesch.

2. a holding out, offering, Eur.

ojrevgnumi

ojrevgnumi , = ojrevgw , only in part., cei`ra" ojregnuv" Il.: Med., cei`ra" ojregnuvmeno" Anth.

ojrevgw, jORE vGW, ojrevgw

jORE vGW , impf. w[regon : f. ojrevxw : aor. I w[rexa :—Med. and Pass. f. ojrevxomai : aor. I wjrexavmhn and wjrevcqhn : pf. w[regmai , redupl. 3 pl. ojrwrevcatai , plqpf. -evcato :— to reach, stretch, stretch out, Lat. porrigo , cei`rÆ ojrevgwn Od.; esp. in entreaty, Ib.

2. to reach out, hold out, hand, give, Hom., Hes., etc.
II. Med. and Pass.,
1. absol. to stretch oneself out, stretch forth ones hand, Hom.; ojrevxasqai ajpo; divfrou to reach or lean over the chariot, Hes.; e[gcei ojrexavsqw let him lunge with the spear (from the chariot, instead of dismounting), Il.; possi;n ojrwrevcatai polemivzein , of horses, they stretched themselves, galloped, to the fight, Ib.; ojrevxatÆ ijwvn he stretched himself as he went, i.e. went at full stride, Ib.; ojrwrevcato proti; deirhvn stretched themselves with the neck (like Virgils irasci in cornua, in clipeum assurgere ), Ib.:—of fish, to rise at the bait, Theocr.

2. c. gen. to reach at or to a thing, grasp at, ou| paido;" ojrevxato he reached out to his child, Il.; also in a hostile sense, tou` Qrasumhvdh" e[fqh ojrexavmeno" w\mon hit him first on the shoulder, Ib.; so, e[fqh ojrexavmeno" skevlo" (sc. aujtou` ) Ib.

B. metaph. to reach after, grasp at, yearn for a thing, c. gen., Eur., Thuc., etc.:—c. inf., povlin wjrevxatÆ oijkei`n Eur.

3. c. acc. to help oneself to, si`ton Id.

ojreiavrch"

ojrei-avrch" , ou, oJ , mountain-king, i.e. Pan, Anth.

ojreiav"

ojreiav" , avdo", hJ , ( o[ro" ) of or belonging to mountains, pevtra ojr . a mountain crag, Anth.

II. as Subst. an Oread, mountain-nymph, Bion.

ojreibasiva

ojreiba±siva , hJ , a mountaineers life, Strab.

II. ojreibavsia (sc. iJerav ) , tav , ( baivnw ) a festival in which persons traversed the mountains, Id.; and ojreibatevw

ojreibatevw


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