A.swing to and fro, “ἀμπεπαλὼν προΐει δολιχόσκιον ἔγχος” Il.3.355, etc.; ἀμπάλλειν κῶλα, i. e. dance, Ar.Ra.1358; ἀνέπηλεν ἐπὶ θήρᾳ . . μαινάδας urged them on, E.Ba.1190; “κλήρους εἰς ἄγγος ἐμβαλοῦσαι ἀνέπηλαν” Ant.Lib.10.3:—Med., αἳ . . αἰθέρα ἀμπάλλεσθε agitate it as you fly, E. Or.322:—Pass., dart, spring or bound up, “ὡς δ᾽ ὅθ᾽ ὑπὸ φρικὸς . . ἀναπάλλεται ἰχθύς . . ὣς πληγεὶς ἀνέπαλτο” Il.23.692, cf. Eun.Hist.p.239D., Agath.3.16, 4.18:—Il. l. c. proves that the sync. aor. ἀνέπαλτο (also found in Il.8.85, 20.424, cf. “ἀνὰ δ᾽ ἔπαλτ᾽ ὀρθῷ ποδί” Pi.O.13.72, and metaph., “νεῖκος ἀνέπαλτο” B.10.65) must be referred to this Verb (cf. ἔκπαλτο, ἐνέπαλτο, κατέπαλτο); but part. ἀνεπάλμενος is formed from ἀνεφάλλομαι in A.R.2.825; those who, like Heyne, refer it to ἀνεφάλλομαι, write it ἀνεπᾶλτο (cf. ἐπᾶλτο): —aor. Med. “ἀνεπήλατο” Mosch.2.109: aor. part. Pass. “ἀναπαλείς” Str.8.6.21.
ἀναπάλλω , poet. ἀμπάλλω , Ep. aor. part. ἀμπεπαλών:—