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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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GLOSSARY OF MYTHOLOGICAL WORDS<br />

AND PHRASES IN ENGLISH<br />

Many of us talk the language of myth without even realizing it. Myth encompasses a tradition, a repository<br />

of images, themes, motifs, and archetypes that can serve to give human speech resonance beyond<br />

its imme<strong>dia</strong>te context. When Hamlet compares his murdered father to his uncle as Hyperion to<br />

a satyr, he speaks a powerful shorthand; the images conveyed by these two personages do more to<br />

express his inner state than if he were simply to speak admiringly of the one and disparagingly of the<br />

other. Often we use mythological references in our everyday speech, blissfully unaware that many of<br />

our common everyday expressions find their origin in the mythic traditions of Greece and Rome; one<br />

can use the word chaotic without knowing its ultimate source. The following list briefly explains the<br />

original mythological meaning of some of the more common terms that have entered our language.<br />

Achillean/Achilles' heel/Achilles' tendon Achilles<br />

was the son of the mortal Peleus and the nymph<br />

Thetis. A warrior of legendary prowess in battle and<br />

the hero of Homer's Iliad, he was essential to the<br />

Greek war effort against Troy. To describe someone<br />

as Achillean is to mark that person as invincible or<br />

invulnerable, or nearly so. Achilles himself had one<br />

vulnerable spot. His mother dipped the infant<br />

Achilles in the magical waters of the river Styx in a<br />

vain attempt to render him immortal; she grasped<br />

him by the heel in order to submerge him in the<br />

stream, thereby leaving one spot on his body susceptible<br />

to injury. Paris took advantage of this weakness<br />

and with Apollo's help delivered the fatal arrow<br />

to Achilles' heel. An Achilles' heel refers to the<br />

one assailable feature or weakness a person may<br />

have; in anatomy the Achilles' tendon stretches from<br />

the heel bone to the calf muscle.<br />

Adonis Adonis was such a handsome youth that<br />

Aphrodite herself found him irresistible. A capable<br />

hunter, he disregarded the warnings of the goddess<br />

to retreat in the face of a boar that stood its ground<br />

and sustained a fatal injury from a charging boar's<br />

tusk. A grieving Aphrodite sprinkled nectar on the<br />

blood-soaked ground and the anemone blossomed<br />

forth. To call a man an Adonis is to draw attention<br />

to his beauty.<br />

aegis The aegis is the shield of Zeus (originally<br />

a "goatskin"), which thunders when he shakes it.<br />

Athena also bore the aegis, often tasseled and with<br />

the head of Medusa affixed, its petrifying power still<br />

intact. This divine shield afforded safety and security,<br />

and so to be under the aegis of an individual or<br />

of an institution is to be favored with protection,<br />

sponsorship, or patronage.<br />

Aeolian harp or lyre Aeolus was put in charge<br />

of the winds by Zeus. He kept watch over his subjects<br />

in a cave on the island of Aeolia. An Aeolian<br />

764<br />

harp is a box-shaped musical instrument across<br />

which strings are strung; the strings vibrate when<br />

wind passes across them.<br />

Amazon The Amazons were a warrior-race of<br />

women from the North who joined battle with a terrifying<br />

war-cry. They were the equal of men in the<br />

field. They came to be seen as haters of men, women<br />

who sought foreign husbands, only to kill their sons<br />

and raise their daughters as Amazons. Later tradition<br />

has it that they cut off their right breasts to become<br />

better archers. A vigorous and aggressive<br />

woman today might be deemed an amazon, while<br />

also conveying the idea of enormous physical<br />

stature. Often it is a derogatory term. The Amazon<br />

ant is a species of red ant that captures the offspring<br />

of other species and turns them into slaves.<br />

ambrosia/ambrosial The Greek gods on Olympus<br />

took food and drink as mortals do. But since the<br />

gods are of a different order from mortals, so too is<br />

their sustenance. Ambrosia, culled from the regions<br />

beyond the Wandering Rocks, served variously as<br />

food for the gods, as unguent or perfume, or as fodder<br />

for horses. It is often coupled with nectar, which<br />

provided drink for the Olympians. Both words derive<br />

from roots that indicate their power to bestow<br />

immortality and stave off death. Today ambrosia can<br />

refer to a dessert of fruit and whipped cream or, especially<br />

when joined with nectar, any gourmet masterpiece.<br />

Generally, ambrosial has come to indicate<br />

anything fit for the gods or of divine provenance, or<br />

anything delicious or fragrant. See nectar.<br />

aphrodisiac According to Hesiod, Aphrodite<br />

was born of the foam around the severed genitals of<br />

Uranus, a fitting beginning for a divinity whose concern<br />

is the sexual. From her name comes the noun<br />

aphrodisiac, denoting anything that has the power<br />

to excite the sexual passions.

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