[606] loc. cit.

[607] The word is certainly in my experience rare, and is not given in Skarlatos’ Lexicon. But it occurs e.g. in a popular tradition from Thessaly concerning the Callicantzari, in Πολίτης, Παραδόσεις, I. p. 356.

[608] Λεξικὸν τῆς καθ’ ἡμᾶς Ἑλληνικῆς διαλέκτου, s.v. κατσιασμένος.

[609] Plutarch, de εἰ apud Delphos, 9 (p. 389).

[610] Balsamon, p. 231 (Migne, Patrol. Gr.-Lat. Vol. 137).

[611] Ulpian, ad Dem. p. 294. Cf. also Balsamon, loc. cit.

[612] Müller and Donaldson, History of the Literature of Ancient Greece, I. p. 382.

[613] Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, s.v. Dionysia.

[614] See above, p. [151].

[615] I write d in the place of the Greek τ, which when following ν always has the sound of English d.