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- Total disintegration → not just breaking, but reducing to minuscule parts, akin to shattering glass or exploding into splinters.
- Sudden, violent action → a forceful rupture, like a pot breaking into shards (τὴν χύτραν συντρίψασα, Plato Hp. Maior 290e).
- Aristophanes (Pax 71) → συντρίβῆναι τῆς κεφαλῆς (to have one’s head shattered).
- Thucydides (4.11) → συντρίβειν τὰς ναῦς (to stave in ships, breaking them apart).
- Euripides → συντρίβω = contundere (Latin: to pound, pulverize).
- συν- (together, completely) + τρίβω (rub, wear down, crush)
- The root τρίβω already implies grinding, wearing down, but συν- amplifies it to total destruction.
- Smash to smithereens
- Pulverize
- Reduce to dust
1. Philosophy & Intellectual Metaphors
- Aristophanes, Vespae 1050 → συντρίβειν τὴν ἐπίνοιαν (to shatter one's design or thought)
- Here, συντρίβω signifies intellectual failure, as if an idea were physically smashed.
- Demades (12), Demosthenes (10.44) → συντρίβειν τὴν ἐλπίδα (to crush hope).
- Like καταγνύω, it implies a total loss of expectation.
- Polybius (21.13.2) → συντρίβειν τῇ διανοίᾳ (mentally shattered).
- Used to describe extreme psychological exhaustion.
- Plato (Republic 611d) uses συντετριμμένος to describe the crushed parts of the soul, showing a metaphysical use of the word.
- The idea of συντρίβω as the collapse of one’s mental structure aligns with Stoic and Platonic thought on the fragility of human perception.
2. Tragedy & Emotional Ruin
- Euripides, Cyclops 705 → ἐπειὸς σε συντρίψω (for I will crush you).
- Here, συντρίβω implies utter physical domination, but the Cyclops' defeat also symbolizes humiliation and psychological collapse.
- Plutarch (Moral. 165b) → δέος συντρίβει τὸν ἄνθρωπον (fear crushes a man).
- Fear is likened to a grinding force that destroys the will.
- Menander (Epitrepontes 561) → ὁ τρόπος συντρίβει σε (your character crushes you).
- Here, one’s own personality is the destructive force.
- Tragedy uses συντρίβω to express total defeat—physical, emotional, or existential.
- It conveys irreversibility (like a shattered vessel cannot be restored).
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