odysseus

listen to the pronunciation of odysseus
Englisch - Türkisch
(isim) Odise [mit.]
{i} Odise [mit.]
odise

Odiseus ve Morfeus, Zeus gibi mükemmel normallikte söylenir. - Odysseus and Morpheus are pronounced, with perfect regularity, like Zeus.

(Mitoloji) odysseus
Englisch - Englisch
son of Laertes and father of Telemachus; a Greek leader during the Trojan War, and responsible for the Trojan horse; king of Ithaca; hero of the Iliad and protagonist of the Odyssey
in ancient Greek stories, the King of Ithaca and husband of Penelope, who is the main character in the poem The Odyssey by Homer. He spent ten years fighting in the Trojan War, and another ten years travelling home after the war. He is brave, clever, and good at tricking people in order to get what he wants. In ancient Roman stories his name is Ulysses. Iliad, the Trojan War, the. Roman Ulysses Hero of Homer's Odyssey. According to Homer, Odysseus was the king of Ithaca. His shrewdness, resourcefulness, and endurance enabled him to capture Troy (through the device of the Trojan horse) and endure nine years of wandering and adventures before reaching his home in Ithaca, where his wife, Penelope, and son, Telemachus, awaited him. Classical opinion was divided on whether he was an unscrupulous politician or a wise and honourable statesman. Odysseus has been one of the most frequently portrayed figures in literature, treated by numerous Greek and Roman poets and by later writers such as William Shakespeare (Troilus and Cressida), Níkos Kazantzákis (The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel), and (metaphorically) by James Joyce (Ulysses) and Derek Walcott (Omeros). Elytis Odysseus Odysseus Alepoudhelis Grant Ulysses S. Hiram Ulysses Grant Kay Ulysses Simpson
son of Laertes; wisest Greek leader during the Trojan War, and resposible for the Trojan horse; king of Ithaca; hero of the Iliad and protagonist of the Odyssey
{i} hero of the "Odyssey", one of the Greek leaders in the Trojan War, king of Ithaca (Greek Mythology)
(Greek mythology) a famous mythical Greek hero; his return to Ithaca after the siege of Troy was described in the Odyssey
Odysseus Elytis
or Odysseas Elyts, orig. Odysseus Alepoudhelis born Nov. 2, 1911, Iráklion, Crete died March 18, 1996, Athens, Greece Greek poet. The scion of a prosperous Cretan family, he began publishing verse influenced by French Surrealism in the 1930s. His first two collections reveal his love of the Greek landscape and the Aegean Sea. During World War II he joined the antifascist resistance and became something of a bard among young Greeks. One of his best-known poems is The Axion Esti (1959); later works include The Sovereign Sun (1971) and The Little Mariner (1986). He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1979
Türkisch - Englisch
(Mitoloji) odysseus
odysseus

    Silbentrennung

    O·dys·seus

    Türkische aussprache

    ōdîsiıs

    Aussprache

    /ōˈdəsēəs/ /oʊˈdɪsiːəs/

    Etymologie

    [ O-'di-sE-&s, -'dis-y&s ] (noun.) From Ancient Greek Ὀδυσσεύς (Odysseús). From the Greek verb ὀδύσσομαι (odyssomai) meaning "to hate" or "to be angry"
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