undefiled, immaculate, E. IA 1574, A.R. 4.1025; μίτρη Mosch. 2.73: c. gen., ἡδονῶν M.Ant. 3.4; ἐμψύχου βρώσεως Philostr. VA 6.11; αἵματος Opp. H. 2.648: metaph., τεκμήριον καθαρὸν καὶ ἄ. Pl. Alc. 1.113e; ἄ. ἰδέα Luc. Dem.Enc. 13, cf. Am. 22; οἰκειότητες Jul. Or. 1.9c; τὸ ἄ. δικαστήριον, freq. in Pap., as POxy. 59.10 (iii A. D.); ἄ. πυρί, of a cup, Ion Trag. 1.2, cf. Theoc. 1.60. Adv. -τως Iamb. Myst. 5.9, Procl. in Alc. p.32C.
The corpus record
ἄχραντος
achrantos
undefiled, immaculate
Generated live from the audited corpus — every figure on this page is a database query, not prose from memory.
Where it lives
- Iphigenia in Aulis 1 · 1.12/10k
- Alcibiades 1 1 · 0.98/10k
- Meditations 1 · 0.34/10k
What it meant — LSJ
undefiled, immaculate
In the wild
- ἄχραντον · achranton Euripides, Iphigenia in Aulis *)aggelos.1570 (DIORISIS sentence 988)
- ἄχραντον · achranton Marcus Aurelius, Meditations 3.4.3 (DIORISIS sentence 247)
- ἄχραντον · achranton Plato, Alcibiades 1 114
Where it came from
No etymology authority pointer is recorded for this lemma yet — an honest gap, not an omission. The etymological dictionaries (Beekes, Chantraine, Frisk) are matched incrementally.