A.“ὀλισθήσω” LXXPr. 14.19, Nonn.D.36.458 : pf. “ὠλίσθηκα” Hp.Art.57, 65 : plpf. ὠλισθήκειν (v. infr. 11.1) : aor. “ὠλίσθησα” AP9.125, Str.Chr.4.8 (p.476 Kr.), etc. ; 3pl. “ὠλίσθησαν” Nic.Fr.74.51 (codd. Ath., ὠλίσθηναν cj. Schn.) ; part. fem. “ὀλισθήνασα” Id.Al.89: but in classical Att. always aor. 2 ὤλισθον, part. ὀλισθών, inf. ὀλισθεῖν (Hom. only in Il., in Ep. 3sg. ὄλισθε, v. infr.) :—slip, fall upon a slippery path, “ἔνθ᾽ Αἴας μὲν ὄλισθε θέων” Il.23.774 ; ἐκ δέ οἱ ἧπαρ ὄλισθεν his liver fell from him, 20.470 ; ἐξ ἀντύγων ὤλισθε he slipped from . . , S.El.746 ; “ὀ. τῆς χειρὸς ὁ σίδηρος” Arist.Mech. 854a19 ; “νηὸς ὀλισθών” AP9.267 (Phil.) ; ὐ. εἴσω, ἔξω, of a bone, slip out of the socket on one side or the other, Hp.Fract.14,37 ; “θαυμαστὰ γὰρ τὸ τόξον ὡς ὀλισθάνει” slips, loses its force, S.Fr.960 : metaph., “ὀ. εἰς νοῦσον” AP7.233 (Apollonid.); “ἐς Ἅιδου” IG14.1642 ; in moral sense, make a slip, Ar.Ra.690 ; in literary sense, “εἰς τερατώδεις ὀ. ἀναπλασμούς” Metrod.Herc.831.5.
2. slip or glide along, “ὀ. ἐν τῷ λάβδα ἡ γλῶττα” Pl.Cra.427b ; “βέλος διὰ σαρκὸς ὄλισθεν” Theoc.25.230.
2. make to slip, “τὰς διανοίας” LXXSi.3.24.