05214
Source: 550, 559, 563, 564
@LINK ὑμνέω
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5214. ὑμνέω [ὕμνος] I. with acc. to sing, laud, sing of, Lat. canere, c. acc., Hes., Trag.:—also in Prose, to celebrate, commemorate, Hdt., Xen.;—c. dupl. acc., ἃ τὴν πόλιν ὕμνησα the points wherein I praised our city, Thuc.:—Pass. to be sung of, Ἀργεῖοι ὑμνέαται (ionic for -ηνται) have been praised, Hdt.; ὑμνηθήσεται πόλις Eur.; αἱ ὑμνούμεναι φιλίαι the famous friendships, Arist.
2. c. acc. cogn. to sing, Aesch., Eur.
II. to tell over and over and over again, to repeat, recite, rehearse, Lat. decantare, Plat.; ὑμνήσεις κακά wilt sing continually of thy ills, Soph.; τὰν ἐμὰν ὑμνεῦσαι (ionic for -οῦσαι) ἀπιστοσύναν ever singing of my want of faith, Eur.:—Pass., βαί᾽, ἀεὶ δ᾽ ὑμνούμενα few words, but such as oft repeated, Soph.
III. intr. to sing, chant, Thuc., Xen.
2. in a pass. sense, φῆμαι ὑμνήσουσι περὶ τὰ ὦτα will ring in their ears, Plat. [In Eur. sometimes υ.]
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5214. ὑμνέω uJmnevw humneo {hoom-neh'-o}
from 5215; to hymn, i.e. sing a religious ode; by implication, to celebrate (God) in song:--sing a hymn (praise unto). see GREEK for 5215
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5214 niyr neer
a root probably identical with that of 5216, through the idea
of the gleam of a fresh furrow; to till the soil:--break up.
see HEBREW for 05216