A.stone, Hom., etc.; esp. of the stones thrown by warriors, τρηχὺς λ., λ. ὀκριόεις, Il.5.308, 8.327; also, stonequoit, Od.8.190; “ἑλέσθαι . . ἐκ γαίας λίθον” A.Fr.199.4; of building- stones, “λίθοι βασιλικοί” PSI4.423.28, PCair.Zen.499.20 (both iii B.C.): prov., “ἐν παντὶ γάρ τοι σκορπίος φρουρεῖ λίθῳ” S.Fr.37; λίθον ἕψειν 'to lose one's labour', Ar.V.280; also of stupid persons, 'blockheads', “λίθοι” Id.Nu.1202, cf. Thgn.568, Pl.Hp.Ma.292d, Gal.9.656; λ. τις, οὐ δούλη Herod.6.4; προσηγορεύθη διὰ τὸ μὴ φρονεῖν λ., of Niobe, Philem.101; “ὥσπερ λίθον ζῆν” Pl.Grg.494a sq.; λίθῳ λαλεῖς prov. of ἀναίσθητοι, Macar.5.61.
2. stone as a substance, opp. wood, flesh, etc., “ἐπεὶ οὔ σφι λ. χρὼς οὐδὲ σίδηρος” Il.4.510; λαοὺς δὲ λίθους ποίησε turned into stone, petrified, 24.611, cf. Pl.Smp.198c; so [“νῆα] θεῖναι λ.” Od.13.156; as an emblem of hard-heartedness, “σοὶ δ᾽ αἰεὶ κραδίη στερεωτέρη ἐστὶ λίθοιο” 23.103, cf. Theoc.3.18.
II. λίθος, ἡ, twice in Hom., Il.12.287, Od.19.494, just like masc., also in Theoc.7.26, Bion Fr.1.2: later mostly of some special stone, as the magnet is called Μαγνῆτις λ. by E.Fr.567 (but ἡ λίθος simply in Democr.11k, Arist.Ph. 267a2, cf. v.l. de An.405a20); also Λυδία λ. by S.Fr.800 (but in B.Fr. 10 J. Λυδία λ. = touchstone); Ἡρακλεία λ. by Pl.Ion533d, Epicur.Fr. 293; so of a touchstone, Pl.Grg.486d; ἡ διαφανὴς λ. a piece of crystal used for a burning-glass, Ar.Nu.767, cf. Luc.Alex.21; χυτὴ λ. was perh. a kind of glass, and so an older name for ὕαλος, Epin.1.8 (the same thing as the ἀρτήματα λίθινα χυτά in Hdt.2.69; cf. “τὴν ὕαλον . . ὅσα τε λίθων χυτὰ εἴδη καλεῖται” Pl.Ti.61c); λ. = precious stone is fem. in Hp.Nat.Mul.99, IG22.1421.92, 1460.21, but masc. in Hdt.2.44, etc.; in the sense of marble mostly masc., “λευκὸς λ.” Id.4.87 (simply “λίθος” 1.164), S.Fr.330 (λευκοὶ λ. is opp. “πέτρινοι λ.” Supp.Epigr.4.446.8 (Didyma)); “Πάριος λ.” Pi.N.4.81, Hdt.3.57; “Ταινάριος λ.” Str.8.5.7; λ. Θάσιος, Αἰγύπτιος, etc., Paus.1.18.6, etc.; “κογχίτης” Id.1.44.6; “κογχυλιάτης” X.An.3.4.10; but “Παρία λ.” Theoc.6.38, Luc.Am.13; cf. λυχνίας, -ίτης; πώρινος λ. tufa, Hdt.5.62.
III. grave-stone (fem.), Call.Epigr.8.1.
2. another in the ἀγορά used by the κήρυκες, Plu.Sol.8; prob. the same as ὁ πρατὴρ λ., on which the auctioneer stood when selling slaves, etc., Poll.3.78, cf. 126.
3. an altar in the ἀγορά, at which the Thesmothetae, arbitrators, and witnesses took their oaths, Philoch.65, D.54.26 (restored from Harp. s.v. λίθος), Arist.Ath.7.1, 55.5, Plu.Sol.25; cf. λιθωμότης.
4. two stones on which litigants stood in the Areopagus, Paus.1.28.5.
V. piece on a draughtboard, Alc.82, Theoc. 6.18, cf. “γραμμή” 111.1: hence pron., “πάντα λίθον κινεῖν” Zen.5.63 (who explains it differently).
VI. Medic., stone in the bladder, calculus, Arist.HA519b19, Hp.Morb.4.55, al.
VII. Δία λίθον ὀμνύναι, = Lat. Jovem lapidem jurare, Plb.3.25.6.
VIII. λίθοι χαλάζης hail- stones, LXX Jo.10.11.