My experience with the online Liddell-Scott is that it is not as comprehensive.
I find "skoramis" (óêùñáìßò with omega in case the Greek is unreadable) on page 1618b of my 1971 reprint of Liddell & Scott (double D, double L and double columned) defined as "night stool," and Aristophanes as the source, thus Ar. Ec. 371.
A. Bouazza.
From: Stan Kelly-Bootle <skb@BOOTLE.BIZ>
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Sent: Saturday, November 22, 2008 3:40:50 AM
Subject: Re: [NABOKV-L] Browning's Skoramis--addendum
We may never know what a playful [sic!] word prankster like Aristophanes meant by “skoramis.” We tend to think of Greek and Latin as “frozen-clean” but at the time, in their day, they were subject to all the semantic/idiomatic shifts of living languages. I haven’t located “skoramis” in the Liddle-Scott online dictionaries, nor can I find “chamber-pot/commode” on the English side of L-S
definitions, but I have sent a query to perseus at Tufts.
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