χύτραν ποικίλλω

Ancient Greek

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Etymology

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From χύτρα (khútra, earthen pot, pipkin) (Modern χύτρα (chýtra, stewpot, cauldron)) and ποικίλλω (poikíllō, decorate, embellish, embroider).

Pronunciation

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Verb

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χῠ́τρᾱν ποικῐ́λλω (khútrān poikíllō)

  1. to do something useless and inconsequential; inessential, uncalled-for and gratuitous
  2. to do something unceasingly

Usage notes

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χύτραν is in the accusative singular form of χύτρα. Used mostly in the second person of the singular: χύτραν ποικίλλεις.

See also

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References

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  • Scholia In Aristophanem, Scholia in ranas (scholia vetera) Argumentum-scholion, v. 186.
  • Scholia In Aristophanem, Scholia in vespas (scholia vetera, recentiora Tricliniana et Aldina) Argumentum-dramatis personae-scholion, v. 280b.