Page:Vocabulary of Menander (1913).djvu/52

48

XII 111 suppl. 1296.4 (I$a$). Inscr. reg. Bosp. Latyschev 48, 65, 342 (I–III$p$). Letronne, Notices et Extraits des Mss. de la Bibl. imper. XVIII 2. p. 179 pap. 10.18 (145 B.C.); al. Freq. in Latin authors; e. g. Hor. Od. 2.10.8; al. Verg. Aen. 3.354.

1128 K. A doubtful fragment; see Kock's note.

377 K. ap. B.A. 473.3. Poll. 1.217. Alex. 45K. Plut. Vit. 897 B. Synes. Ep. 4 p. 164 A. Agathias Hist. 4.9 p. 118 B; 19 p. 128 C.

690.2 K. Hesychius. Symm. Ps. 58 (59). 16. Schol. Aesch. Prom. 371. Symm. Deut. 28.20. Kock rejects l. 2 because of this word.

Sam. 179 Körte. Phryn. 14 L., 64 R. . [Hdn.] Philet. 451 . Moer. 34 . Hellad. ap. Phot. Bibl. p. 535 a 42; Th. M. 13.11. Some authorities admit both forms: ap. B.A. 475.6. See Hdn. I 511 Lentz. Some make a distinction in meaning between the two forms: Etym. Gud. 100.51 (sic). See Ammon. 27 Valck. The distinction is not borne out by the examples. Rutherford, Phryn. pp. 64 f. says: "The question has been settled by Wecklein in Curae Epigraphicae, p. 51, where he quotes from Attic inscriptions, (bis),, and . Stone records exhibit no instances of the forms with sigma even before a vowel, and the same lesson is taught by metre.  There is no doubt that to all Attic texts the shorter forms should be restored, without any regard to manuscripts, as even in Thucydides the copyists followed no rule, but wrote either indifferently." occurs Il. 4.522; 16. 324; al. [Plat.] Tim. Locr. 101 A. Theophr. fr. 5.61. Leonid. Tarent. 434 Geffcken; 523; al. Hero Alex. I 284.22 Schmid; 374.11; al. Bion 1.43. Lxx v. l. Judg. 11.33 and Job. 32.11. Apollon. Rh. 3.763; 875; al. Herond. 1.14; 3.88; al. Aretaeus "passim" (Ermerins). NT Gal. 3.19; Heb.