Bailly
mieux que παλαιστή, ῆς (ἡ) [πᾰ] creux de la main, paume,
d’où longueur de quatre doigts, CRAT. (
Com. fr. 2, 90) et PHILÉM. (
Com. fr. 4, 10).
➳ Dans les inscr. att. παλαστή, CIA. 2, 1054, 18-19, 41, 43, etc. (347 av. J.C.) ; v. Meisterh. p. 14, 16.
Étym. παλαίω.
Bailly 2020 Hugo Chávez Gérard Gréco, André Charbonnet, Mark De Wilde, Bernard Maréchal & contributeurs / Licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale - Pas de Modification — « CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 »
LSJ
ἡ, = παλάμη, palm of the hand; hence, as a measure of length, palm, four fingers’ breadth, IG1². 372.35, Cratin. 133, IG2². 1665.10, 1666 A 67, 70, al. (iv BC), 11 (2).287 A 95 (Delos, iii BC), CIG 2860.14 (Delos), cf. Phryn. 264, PLit. Lond. 183; — also παλαιστή, Hp. Nat. Mul. 33, Arist. HA 606a14, PCair. Zen. 484.11 (iii BC), Plb. 1.22.4, Hero Aut. 3.1, Geom. 4.1, D.S. 1.55, etc. ; also παλαιστής, οῦ, ὁ, LXX Ex. 25.23 (25), 3 Ki. 7.24, Hero Def. 131, Geom. 4.10, S.E. M. 9.300; written παλεστής, POxy. 669.27, 34 (iii AD); cf. παλαιστιαῖος.
Liddell-Scott-Jones, Greek-English Lexicon (9th ed., 1940)
TBESG
the palm of the hand : as a measure of length, a palm, four fingers' breadth , a little more than three inches. (ML)
Translators Brief lexicon of Extended Strongs for Greek based on Abbot-Smith, A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament (1922) (=AS), with corrections and adapted by Tyndale Scholars