A.“καμεῖται” Il.2.389, Pl.Lg.921e; Ep. inf. “-έεσθαι” A.R.3.580: aor. 2 ἔκα^μον, Ep. “κάμον” Il.4.187,al.; inf. καμεῖν, Ep. subj. redupl. κεκάμω, κεκάμῃσι, κεκάμωσιν, Il.1.168, 17.658, 7.5 (but Aristarch. read κε κάμω, etc., prob. rightly): pf. “κέκμηκα” Il.6.262, etc.: plpf. “ἐκεκμήκεσαν” Th.3.98; Ep. part. κεκμηώς, κεκμηῶτι, κεκμηῶτα, Il.23.232, 6.261, Od.10.31; “κεκμηότας” Il.11.802; κεκμηῶτας is v.l. for κεκμηκότας in Th.3.59:— Med., aor. 2 “ἐκα^μόμην” Od.9.130, Ep. “καμ-” Il.18.341.
I. trans., work, μίτρη, τὴν Χαλκῆες κάμον ἄνδρες wrought it, 4.187,216; “ἐπεὶ πάνθ᾽ ὅπλα κάμε” 18.614; “σκῆπτρον . . , τὸ μὲν Ἥφαιστος κάμε τεύχων” 2.101, cf. 8.195; “κ. νῆας” Od.9.126; “πέπλον” Il.5.338, cf. Od.15.105; “ἵππον” 11.523; “λέχος” 23.189; ἄστυ build, A.R.1.1322: also in aor. Med., “ἱρόν” Id.2.718.
II. intr., toil, labour, τινι for one, Od.14.65; “ὑπὲρ τῆς πόλεως” Th.2.41: then, from the effect of continued work, to be weary, “ἀνδρὶ δὲ κεκμηῶτι μένος μέγα οἶνος ἀέξει” Il.6.261, cf. 11.802: with acc. of the part, οὐδέ τι γυῖα . . κάμνει nor is he weary in limb, 19.170, etc.; “περὶ δ᾽ ἔγχεϊ Χεῖρα καμεῖται” 2.389; “ὁ δ᾽ ἀριστερὸν ὦμον ἔκαμνεν” 16.106: freq. c. part., κ. πολεμίζων, ἐλαύνοντες, ἐρεθίζων, is weary of fighting, rowing, etc., 1.168, 7.5, 17.658, etc.; “οὐ μέν θην κάμετον . . ὀλλῦσαι Τρῶας” 8.448; “ἔκαμον δέ μοι ὄσσε πάντῃ παπταίνοντι” Od.12.232; but οὐδέ τι τόξον δὴν ἔκαμον τανύων I did not long strain over stringing the bow, i.e. did it without effort, 21.426, cf. Il.8.22: later freq. with neg., οὔτοι καμοῦμαι . . λέγουσα I shall never be tired of saying, A.Eu.881; “μὴ κάμῃς λέγων” E.IA1143; “οὐκ ἂν κάμοιμι τὰς κακὰς κτείνων” Id.Or.1590; “οὔποτε κάμοιμ᾽ ἂν ὀρχουμένη” Ar.Lys.541 (lyr.); κ. εὐεργετῶν, ἐπαινῶν, Pl.Grg.470c,Lg.921e: c. dat., κ. δαπάναις to grow tired in spending, spare expense, Pi.P.1.90.
3. to be sick or suffering, τί πάσχεις; τί κάμνεις; Ar.Nu.708; οἱ κάμνοντες the sick, Hdt.1.197, cf. S.Ph.282, And.1.64, Pl.R.407c, Ep.Jac.5.15, etc.; of a doctor's patients, Hp.Acut.1, D.18.243, SIG943.10 (Cos); καμοῦσα ἀπέθανε having fallen sick, And.1.120: c. acc. cogn., “κάμνειν νόσον” E.Heracl.990, Pl.R.408e; [τὴν ποδάγραν] v.l. in Arist.HA604a23; “τοὺς ὀφθαλμούς” Hdt.2.111; τὰ σώματα to be ill or distempered in body, Pl.Grg.478a; “ὠσίν τε κὤμμασιν” Herod.3.32; “πάθᾳ” Pi.P.8.48; “νοσήμασι” Arist.HA603a30; “ἀπὸ τοῦ τραύματος” Luc.Tox.60; “ὑπὸ νόσου” Hdn.3.14.2.
4. generally, to be distressed, meet with disaster, “στρατοῦ καμόντος” A.Ag.670; “τῷ πεποιημένῳ κ. μεγάλως” Hdt.1.118, cf. A.Ag.482 (lyr.), E.Med.1138, HF293; οὐ καμῇ τοὐμὸν μέρος wilt not have to complain . . , S.Tr. 1215; “κ. ἔν τινι” E.Hec.306, IA966; of a ship, “νεὼς καμούσης ποντίῳ πρὸς κύματι” A.Th.210: c. acc. cogn., οὐκ ἴσον καμὼν ἐμοὶ λύπης not having borne an equal share of grief, S.El.532.
5. in aor. part., of the dead, i. e. either outworn, or those whose work is done, or those who have met with disaster, “οἳ ὑπένερθε καμόντας ἀνθρώπους τίνυσθον” Il.3.278, cf.Theoc.17.49; “βροτῶν εἴδωλα καμόντων” Od.11.476; εἴδωλα κ. 24.14, Il.23.72, cf. A.Supp.231, etc.: also in pf. part. in Trag. and Prose, “κεκμηκότες” S.Fr.284, E.Supp.756, Th.3.59, Pl.Lg.718a, 927b, Arist.EN1101a35; ἱερὰ τῶν κ. E.Tr.96; also in the finite Verb, “ὅπη ἄνθρωπος ἔκαμε” Berl.Sitzb. 1927.158 (Cyrene).--The pf. is always intr. (Cf. Skt. śamnīte 'work hard', 'serve zealously', śamitár- 'sacrificing priest', Gr. εἰρο-κόμος, κομέω, κομίζω.)