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Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect Online

Posted: Sat Jan 12, 2013 1:58 pm
by Ahab
Browsing over on the TLG site this am and was happily surprised to find that Cunliffe's Lexicon is also online there along with the LSJ.

Here is a link: http://www.tlg.uci.edu/cunliffe/#eid=1&context=lsj

Re: Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect Online

Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 10:28 am
by Paul Derouda
Thanks for the good news! My Cunliffe is going apart.

Re: Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect Online

Posted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 7:41 pm
by jabloom99
There are also some great online resources (although not Cunliffe) over at the Perseus Project, a service of Tufts University.

http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/col ... reco-Roman

If you open up any of the Greek texts, and click on any word, it will load a "word study tool" which links to entries for that word in several dictionaries, including Autenrieth.

Re: Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect Online

Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 5:29 pm
by annis
jabloom99 wrote:including Autenrieth.
I would not normally recommend Autenrieth to anyone except the most desperate. The definitions are so spare as to court being actively misleading.

Re: Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect Online

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 8:12 pm
by Jeff Tirey
Nice link. I would have posted my copy of Cunliff's here at Textkit, but it's actually still under copyright since the original publication date is 1924.

Jeff

Re: Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect Online

Posted: Thu Dec 31, 2015 4:18 pm
by nicola
I'm collecting for my personal use a Homeric word list. Through the Vocabulary Tool in Perseus, I selected both the Iliad and the Odyssey, and I got a total of 9954 words (but the Tool put in the list words like Ἄραψ which of course in no way appears in the Homeric texts, so I'll have to "clean" the list).
I know that the Autenrieth's lexicon is about 5100 words, do you know how many lemmas are in Cunliffe's?

Re: Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect Online

Posted: Sun Jan 03, 2016 12:00 pm
by Paul Derouda
9809, according to the online version at http://stephanus.tlg.uci.edu/cunliffe/# ... ontext=lsj.

That includes a number of conjugated forms such as ἄγεν, ἀγέρθη, ἀγέροντο, which I suppose were considered difficult enough by the author to have their own entry.