Adversaria medico-philologica / by W.A. Greenhill.
- William Alexander Greenhill
- Date:
- [1864-1872]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Adversaria medico-philologica / by W.A. Greenhill. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The Royal College of Surgeons of England. The original may be consulted at The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
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![, bvtjavdicXriTos, hard to he recalled, viz. to health (compare araic\t)ois, evardic\t]Tos'). In Dioscorides,1 buauvaKXiiTws e%eiv means to he hard to be recalled to tlieir senses, not to their health. bvoavaaKevuoTos, hard to be restored, viz. to health.2 bvauvdafaXTos, one that recovers his health with difficulty, opposed toevaraafaXros.3 bvacivios. See bvarjvios. bvacnTOKardaraTus, hard to he restored, as a fracture or dislocation.4 bvacurospiros, hardly able to give an answer to a question, as a person affected with lethargy.5 bvaapearem, to he indisposed, distinguished by Aiitius6 from -rryperru), to have a fever, inasmuch as a person who is bvaapearuiv is still able to go about his usual work. bvcapecTTias, indisposition, malaise, rendered by Cselius Aurelianus “corporis displicentia.”7 bvabaupoppaia, a difficulty of dispersing or dissipating, not neces- sarily relating to perspiration.8 bvabtci(j>6pr]Tos, hard to he dissipated or discussed,9 not necessarily relating to perspiration.10 bvobityeprus narcupopa, applied to the deep sleep of lethargy.11 (See the next word.) bvoeyepros, hardly able to he roused, as a person affected with lethargy ;12 bvaeyeprus vttvos, applied to the deep sleep of coma ;13 to buereyeprov, used as a substantive, the quality of being hard to roused4, bvasKdeppavros (adj.),15 bvaaiQeppaiTujs16 (adv.), hard to he warmed. buaeKirvT]Tos, hard to he brought to suppuration, as a tumour.17 1 ‘De Venen.,’ cap. 16, tom. ii, p. 28, 1. 5, ed. Sprengel. 2 Alexander Trail., xii, cap. ult., p. 776, 1. 33, ed. Basil. 3 Pseudo-Hippocrates, ‘ De Alim./ § 28, tome ix, p. 108, 1. 12, ed. Littre. 4 Pseudo-Galen, ‘ Introd.,’ cap. ult., tom. xiv, p. 792,11.4, 7 ; p. 796, 1. ult. 5 Paulus Algin., iii, 9, p. 28 B, 1. 7, ed. Aid. 6 v, 5, or ii, 1, 5, p. 191, ed. H. Steph. 7 ‘Morb. Chron.,’ iii, 6; v, 10, 11, pp. 463, 583, 600. 8 Cassius, * Problem.,’ § 66, in Ideler’s ‘ Med. et Pbys. Gr. Min.,’ vol. i, p. 163, 1. 31. 9 Paulus /Egin., iv, 18, p. 63 B, 1. 37; Theophanes Nonnus, ‘ Cur. Morb.,’ c. 242, vol. ii, p. 244, 1. 2, ed. Bernard. 10 Galen, ‘De Alim. Facult.,’ i, 23, tom. vi, p. 536, 1. 11; Stepbanus Atlien., ‘ Comment, in Gal. Tlierap. ad Glauc.,’ in Dietz, ‘ Scbol. in Hipp. et Gal.,’ vol. i, p. 274, 1. 2; p. 285, 1. 13, p. 300, 1. ult. 11 Galen, * Defin. Med.,’ c. 235, tom. xix, p. 413, 1. 5. 12 Paulus iEgin., iii, 9, p. 28 b, 1. 7, ed. Aid. 13 Theopbanes Nonnus, ‘Cur. Morb.,’ c. 29, vol. i, p. 114, 1. 1, ed. Bernard. 14 Theophilus, ‘ Comment, in Hippocr. Aphor.,’ ii, 3, in Dietz, ‘ Scbol. in Hippocr. et Gal.,’ vol. ii, p. 297, 11. 20, 21. 15 Antyllus, in Oribasius, ‘Coll. Med.,’ x, 13, tome ii, p. 413, 1. 1, ed. Daremb.; Palladius, ‘ De Febr.,’ cap. 19, p. 66, 1. pen., ed. Bernard. 10 Autyllus, ibid., cap. 29, p. 451, 1. 4. 17 Paulus /Egin., iv, 18, p. 63 b, 1. 37; Theopbanes Nonnus, ‘ Cur. Morb.,’ c. 242, vol. ii, p. 244, 1. 1. {Reprintedfrom the ‘British and Foreiyn Medico- Chirurgical Review,’ Oct., 1S72.)](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b22397589_0104.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)