νῆστις,
gen. ιος or ιδος, ὁ and ἡ (v. infr.); also dat. νήστει Hp. Acut. 60: pl. νήστεις Antiph. 138, D.H. Rh. 9.16: (νη-, ἔδω): -
I
1. not eating, fasting, of persons, ἀνώγοιμι πτολεμίζειν υἷας Ἀχαιῶν νήστιας, ἀκμήνους Il. 19.207; νήστιες ἄχρι.. κνέφαος Od. 18.370, cf. Diocl.Fr. 43, [Mat 15:32], etc.; νήστισιν ἐπιθέντες οἱ πολέμιοι Onos. 12.1: c. gen., νῆστις βορᾶς E. IT 973: metaph., νῆστιν ἀνὰ.. ψάμμαν over the hungry sand, A. Pr. 573 (lyr.).
2. with an abstract Subst., freq. in A., νῆστιν νόσον famine, Ag. 1016 (lyr.); ν. λιμός Ch. 250; νήστισιν αἰκίαις the pains of hunger, Pr. 599 (lyr.); νήστιδες δύαι Ag. 1621; also νῆστις ὀσμή the bad breath of one fasting, Phryn. PS p.91 B.
3. Act., causing hunger, starving, πνοαὶ νήστιδες A. Ag. 193 (lyr.).
II as Subst., νῆστις, ἡ, acc. νῆστιν Ar. Fr. 318.3, 506.4, Eub. 110.
1 the intestinum jejunum, from its always being found empty, Hp. Carn. 19, Ar. Fr. 506.4, Eub. 63.5 (anap.), cf. Arist. PA 675b33.
2. ν. κεστρεύς, fish so called because its stomach was always found empty, Ar. Fr. 156, etc.: hence in Com., of ’empty bellies’, ἐγὼ δὲ κεστρεὺς νῆστις οἴκαδ’ ἀποτρέχω Alex. 256, etc., cf. Ath. 7.307d.
3. Νῆστις, ἡ, = ὕδωρ, Emp. 6.3, cf. Alex. 322.
G3523 — νῆστις
accusative plural νήστεις and (so Tdf. (cf. Proleg., p. 1183) νῆστις (see Lob. ad Phryn., p. 326; Fritzsche, Commentary on Mark, p. 796f; cf. (WHs Appendix, p. 157b); Buttmann, 26 (23)), ὁ, ἡ (from νή and ἐσθίω, see νήπιος), fasting, not having eaten: [Mat 15:32]; [Mar 8:3]. (Homer, Aeschylus, Hippocrates (), Aristophanes, others.)
νῆστις , - ιος , ὁ , ἡ
( < νη -, neg . prefix, + ἐσθίω ),
in cl ., chiefly poët.,
[in LXX : Da LXX [Dan 6:18] (19) (H2908) * ;]
not eating, fasting: [Mat 15:32], [Mar 8:3]. †