[Meaning he/she/it] visits.[1]
Also [sc. attested is]
foita=n, the [verb that means] to study with.
Philostratus [writes]: "they say that Apollonius attended the magi both during the afternoons and around the middle of the nights."[2]
*foita=|: paragi/netai. kai\ *foita=n, to\ sxola/zein. *filo/stratos: foita=n toi=s ma/gois meshmbri/as te kai\ a)mfi\ me/sas nu/ktas fasi\ to\n *)apollw/nion.
[1] =
Synagoge phi160,
Photius phi247 Theodoridis; cf.
Hesychius phi718. Taken to be from commentary to
Homer,
Iliad 24.533, where this form (present indicative or subjunctive active third person singular of
foita/w) occurs, though there are numerous other literary attestations. See also
Hesychius phi721, epsilon7517, pi2121 and, in the Suda,
phi 806.
[2] A close approximation of
Philostratus,
Life of Apollonius of Tyana 1.26. (Quotation lacking, Adler reports, in ms F.) The secondary lemma
foita=n, which appears in the quotation, is the present active infinitive of the same verb.
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