common to all, νοσήματα Hp. Aër. 2, Gal. 17(1).2; π. σοφισταί Poll. 4.43: mostly poet., π. χώρα, of Olympia, Pi. O. 6.63; παγκοίνοις . . Δηοῦς ἐν κόλποις, of Eleusis, S. Ant. 1120 (lyr.); πληγεὶς θεοῦ μάστιγι παγκοίνῳ, i.e. by death, A. Th. 608; ἐξ Ἅιδου παγκοίνου λίμνας S. El. 138 (lyr.); ἓν ἀπέχθημα π. βροτοῖς one object of hate common to all mankind, E. Tr. 425; π. τέρας Pi. Pae. 9.10; στάσις π. all the band together, A. Ch. 458 (lyr.). Adv. -νως Man. 4.506.
The corpus record
πάγ-κοινος
pagkoinos
common to all
Generated live from the audited corpus — every figure on this page is a database query, not prose from memory.
Where it lives
- Antigone 2 · 2.73/10k
- Seven Against Thebes 1 · 1.99/10k
- Libation Bearers 1 · 1.86/10k
- Trojan Women 1 · 1.41/10k
- Electra 1 · 1.15/10k
What it meant — LSJ
common to all, common to all, all, together
In the wild
- πάγκοινος · pankoinos Aeschylus, Libation Bearers 458
- παγκοίνῳ · pankoinōi Aeschylus, Seven Against Thebes 602–608
- πάγκοινον · pankoinon Euripides, Trojan Women (DIORISIS sentence 229)
- παγκοίνοις · pankoinois Sophocles, Antigone 1115–1130
- πάγκοινον · pankoinon Sophocles, Antigone 1049
- παγκοίνου · pankoinou Sophocles, Electra 137–139
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.