ἴνδικος

ον, Adv.

δίκη

I. of things, according to right, just, legitimate, Pi. P. 5.103; γόος ἔ. A. Ch. 330 (lyr.); ὀνείδη Id. Eu. 135; λέκτρα IG 12(5).675.4 (Syros); κρίμα Ep.Rom. 3.8: τὸ μὴ ’νδικον, = τὸ ἄδικον, S. OT 682 (lyr.); τὰ πάντων ἐνδικώτατα Id. OC 925; μὴ λέγων γε τοὔνδικον not speaking truth, Id. OT 1158.
2. legal, ἔ. ἡμέρα a court-day, Poll. 8.25.
b. having a locus standi, μή οἱ ἔστω ἴνδικον μηδέποθι ἀλλ’ ἢ . . he shall not have the right to sue, IG 5(2).6.33 (Tegea, iv B. C.), cf. Foed.Delph.Pell. 2 A 16, Pl. Lg. 915d, IG 22.46c56.
c. = ἔνοχος δίκα, Leg.Gort. 3.23, 11.22.
d. ἔ. πόλις a city in which justice is done, Pl. Hp.Ma. 292b; in which sales may be publicly registered, Milet. 3.140.
II. of persons, upright, just, A. Eu. 699, S. Ant. 208; πρὸς ἐνδίκοις φρεσίν A. Ag. 996 (lyr.); δῆμος ἐνδικώτατος Id. Fr. 196:
c. dat., ἔ. γάμοις favourable to them, Id. Supp. 82 (lyr.).
2. possessed of right, τίς μᾶλλον ἐνδικώτερος; who has a better right? Id. Th. 673.
III. Adv. ‐κως right, with justice, fairly, Id. Pr. 63, Ch. 462 (lyr.), etc.; ὀρθῶς ἐ. τ’ ἐπώνυμος Id. Th. 405: Sup. ‐ώτατα Pl. Ti. 85b.
2. justly, naturally, as one has a right to expect, S. OT 135, E. Andr. 920.
Liddell, Scott & Jones
A Greek-English Lexicon, 1940
An open-access project