Stavgeiro"
Stavgeiro" , hJ , a city in Macedonia, Hdt. , etc. : Stageireivth" , oJ , a Stagyrite, of Aristotle,
stavgma
stavgma , ato", tov , ( stavzw ) a drop, distilment, Aesch.
stagwvn
stagwvn , ovno", hJ , ( stavzw ) a drop, Trag.
stadai`o"
sta±dai`o" , a, on , ( stavdhn ) standing erect or upright, Aesch .; st. e[gch pikes for close fight, opp. to missiles ( cf. stavdio" 1), Id.
stadiasmov"
sta±diasmov" , ou`, oJ , a measuring by stades, Strab.
stadieuv"
sta±dieuv" , evw", oJ , = stadiodrovmo" , Anth.
stadivh
sta±divh , hJ , v. stavdio" .
stadiodromevw
sta±diodromevw , f. hvsw , to run in the stadium, Dem. From stadiodrovmo"
stadiodrovmo"
sta±dio-drovmo" , oJ , one who runs the stadium, one who runs for a prize, Simon., Aeschin.
stavdion
stavdion »a±1/4, tov : pl. stavdia and stavdioi , but never stavdio" in sing. : ( sth`nai ):a fixed standard of length, a stade, = 100 ojrguiaiv or plevqra , i.e. 600 Greek or 606 3/4 English feet, about 1/8 of a Roman mile, Polyb .: eJkato;n stadivoisin a[risto" best by a hundred miles, Ar. ; plei`n h] stadivw/ lalivstero" more loquacious than a mile and more, Id.
II. a race-course (that of Olympia being a stade long), Pind. , etc. ; ajgwnivzesqai st . to run a race, Hdt. ; st. nika`n to win one, Xen.
stavdio"
stavdio" »a±1/4, a, on , ( sth`nai ) standing firm, stadivh uJsmivnh close fight, Lat. pugna stataria , Il.; ejn stadivh/ ( sc. uJsmivnh/ ) Ib.
2. firm, strong, Pind.
stavzw, STA vZW
STA vZW , f. stavxw , Dor. 1 pl. staxeu`me" : aor. I e[staxa , Ep. stavxa :
I.
of persons,
1.
c. acc.
rei,
to drop, let fall
or
shed drop by drop,
Il.,
Aesch.
,
etc.
2.
c. dat.
rei,
ai{mati st
.
to drip
with blood,
Aesch.
;
stavzwn iJdrw`ti
Soph
.;rarely
c. gen
., Id.
II.
intr.
of things,
to drop, fall in drops, drip, trickle,
Hdt
.,
Soph.
,
Eur.
;
metaph.
,
stavzei ejn u{pnw/