Odysseus
[ oh-dis-ee-uh s, oh-dis-yoos ]
/ oʊˈdɪs i əs, oʊˈdɪs yus /
noun Classical Mythology.
king of Ithaca; son of Laertes; one of the heroes of the Iliad and protagonist of the Odyssey: shrewdest of the Greek leaders in the Trojan War.
Latin
Ulysses.
Example sentences from the Web for odysseus
British Dictionary definitions for odysseus
Odysseus
/ (əˈdiːsɪəs) /
noun
Greek myth
one of the foremost of the Greek heroes at the siege of Troy, noted for his courage and ingenuity. His return to his kingdom of Ithaca was fraught with adventures in which he lost all his companions and he was acknowledged by his wife Penelope only after killing her suitors
Roman name: Ulysses
Cultural definitions for odysseus
Odysseus
[Roman name Ulysses]
[ (oh-dis-yoohs, oh-dis-ee-uhs) ]
A Greek hero in the Trojan War (see also Trojan War). Odysseus helped bring about the fall of Troy by conceiving the ruse of the Trojan horse. After Troy was ruined, Odysseus wandered for ten years trying to return home, having many adventures along the way. (See Circe, Cyclops, Penelope, Scylla and Charybdis, and Sirens.)
notes for Odysseus
The story of Odysseus' journey home is told in the
Odyssey of
Homer. By extension, an “odyssey” is any long or difficult journey or transformation.