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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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772 GLOSSARY OF MYTHOLOGICAL WORDS AND PHRASES IN ENGLISH<br />

Midas'/ass's ears/Midas touch/the golden<br />

touch Apollo and Pan entered into a musical contest.<br />

When Apollo was judged victorious by the<br />

mountain-god Tmolus, Midas, the king of Phrygia,<br />

disagreed. For his lack of perception Apollo transformed<br />

Midas' offending ears into those of an ass.<br />

To have ass' ears means that one lacks true musical<br />

judgment and taste. On another occasion, the god<br />

Dionysus granted Midas' wish that whatever he<br />

might touch be turned into gold. To his despair, Midas<br />

found that even as he put food and drink to his<br />

mouth it was transmuted into gold. Dionysus<br />

granted him relief by telling him to bathe in the river<br />

Pactolus, whose bed became golden. To have the<br />

golden touch or Midas' touch means to be successful<br />

in any endeavor.<br />

money/monetary In the Temple of Juno Moneta<br />

("money," "mint") was housed the Roman mint. The<br />

epithet Moneta means "the warner" and refers to an<br />

important legend regarding her temple. When Rome<br />

was threatened in 390 B.c. by an invasion of Gauls,<br />

the sacred geese in Juno's temple began to squawk,<br />

rousing the Romans to battle. Moneta, through the<br />

Old French moneie, has given us the word money; the<br />

adjective monetary, "pertaining to money," comes<br />

from the stem monet-.<br />

morphine Morpheus was the god of dreams, or<br />

more particularly the shapes (morphai) that come to<br />

one in dreams. Later he became confused with the<br />

god of sleep and it is from this confusion that the<br />

meaning of morphine comes. Morphine, an addictive<br />

compound of the opium plant, is used as an anaesthetic<br />

or sedative. The compounds that include the<br />

stem morph-, such as metamorphosis (a transformation<br />

into another shape or state of being), are drawn<br />

from the Greek word morphe ("shape" or "form") and<br />

not the god Morpheus.<br />

muse/music/museum/mosaic The nine Muses<br />

were the daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne ("memory"),<br />

whose province was inspiration in the arts,<br />

particularly poetry and music; from Muse we derive<br />

the word music. The Greek word mouseion ("place of<br />

the Muses"), in Latin museum, has given us museum,<br />

a place for displaying works of artistic, historical, or<br />

scientific interest. From the adjective mousaicos ("pertaining<br />

to the Muses") comes mosaic, a picture or design<br />

made up of small colored tiles or stones.<br />

narcissism/narcissist/narcissistic/narcissus Nar<br />

cissism refers to a psychological state in which the<br />

person has a pathological attachment to oneself. See<br />

echo.<br />

nectar Nectar is the special drink of the gods,<br />

usually paired with their food, ambrosia. Nectar has<br />

come to mean any refreshing drink, the pure juice of<br />

a fruit, or the liquid gathered by bees from the blossoms<br />

of flowers, used in making honey. See ambrosia.<br />

nemesis Nemesis is the goddess of vengeance<br />

who brings retribution to those who have sinned, especially<br />

through hubris ("overweening pride"). A<br />

nemesis denotes the following: the abstract idea of<br />

retributive vengeance; the agent of retribution; an invincible<br />

rival in a contest or battle; or a necessary or<br />

inevitable consequence.<br />

nestor Nestor, the oldest and wisest of the Greek<br />

kings at Troy, lived to see three generations of heroes.<br />

A brave and strong warrior when young, in old<br />

age he was prized for his good counsel and his oratory.<br />

Homer tells us that his speech flowed more<br />

sweetly than honey. When a politician or statesman<br />

today is called a nestor, it is these qualities of wisdom,<br />

good counsel, and oratory that are emphasized.<br />

nymph/nymphomania/nympholepsy Nymphs<br />

are beautiful, idyllic goddesses of wood and stream<br />

and nature, often the objects of love and desire. A<br />

nymph today may simply mean a remarkably attractive<br />

young woman, but if she were to suffer from<br />

nymphomania ("nymph-madness"), she would be<br />

suffering from sexual promiscuousness. Nympholepsy<br />

(from lepsis, "a seizing"), on the other hand,<br />

refers - to the madness that assails one who has<br />

glimpsed a nymph. It can also denote a strong desire<br />

for what is unattainable (Cf. satyr/satyriasis).<br />

ocean In mythology the world is a disc circled by<br />

a stream of water, the god Oceanus, who is the father<br />

of the Oceanids, that is, all the lesser rivers,<br />

streams, brooks, and rills that flow over the earth.<br />

Today ocean can refer to the entire body of salt water<br />

or any of its major divisions covering the globe.<br />

odyssey Homer's Odyssey recounts the return of<br />

Odysseus to Ithaca, his wife, Penelope, and his son,<br />

Telemachus. After ten years of war at Troy, Odysseus<br />

found the day of his return postponed for another ten<br />

years by the god Poseidon. On his extended travels he<br />

overcame many challenges before winning his homecoming.<br />

An odyssey has come to mean a long, tortuous<br />

period of wandering, travel, and adventure, often<br />

in search of a quest, both literally and spiritually.<br />

Oedipus/Oedipal complex King Laius of Thebes<br />

was given a prophecy that his wife, Jocasta, would<br />

bear a son who would kill his father and marry his<br />

mother. They did have a son, whose name was Oedipus,<br />

and when he grew up he killed his father and<br />

married his mother, despite all that was done to avert<br />

the prophecy and destiny. Sophocles' masterpiece,<br />

Oedipus the King, inspired Sigmund Freud to crystal-

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