πλειστηρίζομαι

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Stem πλειστηριδ-j-. From πλειστήρης (pleistḗrēs, manifold, all the whole length).

Pronunciation

 

Verb

πλειστηρῐ́ζομαι • (pleistērízomai) (deponent)

  1. to name, accuse as the cause
    • 458 BCE, Aeschylus, The Libation Bearers 1029–1031:
      καὶ φίλτρα τόλμης τῆσδε πλειστηρίζομαι
      τὸν πυθόμαντιν Λοξίαν, χρήσαντ’ ἐμοὶ
      πράξαντι μὲν ταῦτ’ ἐκτὸς αἰτίας κακῆς
      εἶναι
      kaì phíltra tólmēs têsde pleistērízomai
      tòn puthómantin Loxían, khrḗsant’ emoì
      práxanti mèn taût’ ektòs aitías kakês
      eînai
      And for the spells that gave me the courage for this deed I count Loxias, the prophet of Pytho, my chief source. It was he who declared that, if I did this thing, I would be acquitted of wrongdoing.
      English translation (1926) by Herbert Weir Smyth @perseus
      Scene: Orestes accuses Apollo (or Loxias) for the matricide he committed.

Inflection

Found only in the present:

  • πλειστηριᾰζω (pleistēriazō, raise the price) & compounds
  • and see πλεῖστος (pleîstos, most)

Further reading

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