λόγ-ιος, α, ον, (λόγος)
of or
belonging to λόγοι:
I)
versed in tales or
stories (compare λόγος see), λόγιοι καὶ ἀοιδοί [
Refs 5th c.BC+]; Αἰγυπτίων -ώτατοι [
Refs]; so later, οἱ - ώτατοι τῶν ἀρχαίων συγγραφέων [
Refs 2nd c.BC+]
I.2) generally,
learned, erudite, [
Refs 4th c.BC+]; ὁ λ. Ἀκεστῖνος, of a
learned physician, [
Refs 3rd c.AD+]; οἱ -ώτατοι Τυρρηνῶν, of the Tuscan haruspices, [
Refs 1st c.AD+]; λογιώτατος as title, [
Refs 5th c.AD+]; ὁ τῆς λ. μνήμης σχολαστικός [
Refs 6th c.AD+]
II)
skilled in words, eloquent, τὸ μεγαλοπρεπὲς ὅπερ νῦν καὶ λόγιον ὀνομάζουσιν [
Refs 4th c.BC+] is said to have made [
Refs 4th c.BC+]; epithet of Hermes, as the god of eloquence, [
Refs 2nd c.AD+]; this sense is condemned by [
Refs 2nd c.AD+].
adverb -ίως
eloquently, [
Refs 1st c.AD+]; ὡς ἐνῆν -ώτατα
as nearly in words as possible, of the elephant, [
Refs]
III)
oracular, Ἀπόλλωνος δῶμα λόγιον [
Refs]