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Sisyphus

[ sis-uh-fuhs ]

noun

, Classical Mythology.
  1. a son of Aeolus and ruler of Corinth, noted for his trickery: he was punished in Tartarus by being compelled to roll a stone to the top of a slope, the stone always escaping him near the top and rolling down again.


Sisyphus

/ ˈsɪsɪfəs /

noun

  1. Greek myth a king of Corinth, punished in Hades for his misdeeds by eternally having to roll a heavy stone up a hill: every time he approached the top, the stone escaped his grasp and rolled to the bottom


Sisyphus

  1. A king in classical mythology who offended Zeus and was punished in Hades by being forced to roll an enormous boulder to the top of a steep hill. Every time the boulder neared the top, it would roll back down, and Sisyphus would have to start over.


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Notes

A difficult and futile endeavor may be called a “labor of Sisyphus” or a “Sisyphean task.”

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Word History and Origins

Origin of Sisyphus1

From Latin Sisyphus, from Greek Sísyphos; probably of pre-Greek origin

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Example Sentences

The last line of The Myth of Sisyphus is, “One must imagine Sisyphus happy.”

But for a while we were like Sisyphus pushing that rock up the mountain.

Third, like Sisyphus, he could roll the boulder of a “grand bargain” back up Capitol Hill.

And a deal becomes possible only after all sides are exhausted—just like Sisyphus on the Hill.

In Sisyphus (1994), artist Luciano Fabro presents a marble cylinder on which he has etched a nude, caricature-like self-portrait.

Those splendid faculties were worn, as he would sometimes own himself, in rolling the stone of Sisyphus.

Strong men have tried to lift that stone of Sisyphus, and to-day their bones whiten the cemeteries.

Beyond Sisyphus lies Tityus, a giant whose huge body covers nine acres of ground.

I feel like Sisyphus, forever rolling my stony burden uphill.

They would leave off repeating the fable of Sisyphus, and attain completion of endeavour.

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