释义 |
‖ stichos|ˈstɪkɒs| Pl. stichoi |ˈstɪkɔɪ|. [a. Gr. στίχος row, line, verse. Cf. stich.] 1. In the Greek Church, a verse or versicle.
1863Littledale Offices East. Ch. 248 At the Praises, we recite six stichoi. 1868Walcott Sacred Archæol. 555 Stichos, a short varying versicle and response in the Greek liturgy... The koinonikon is a sacramental hymn and stichos, sung a little before the Communion. 2. Palæogr. A line of a stichometrically written text; a line of average length assumed in measuring the contents of a text or codex.
1885G. Salmon Introd. N.T. xi. 236 note, According to the Stichometry of Nicephorus, it [this Gospel] contained 1300 stichoi. 1911Jrnl. Manch. Oriental Soc. 2 The amount assigned to a stichos is determined, as in all the old inscriptions, by the sense. |