Alcaeus
Americannoun
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flourished c600 b.c., Greek poet of Mytilene.
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Classical Mythology. a son of Androgeus and a grandson of Minos.
noun
Example Sentences
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Sappho belonged to one of these—there’s a fragment in which she chastises a friend “of bad character” for siding with a rival clan—and a famous literary contemporary, a poet called Alcaeus, belonged to another.
From The New Yorker • Mar. 9, 2015
Ode one/nine is written in Alcaics, a four-lined, largely dactylic strophe named after the Greek poet Alcaeus: it's the commonest verse-form in the Odes, a flexible form-for-all-seasons.
From The Guardian • Jul. 30, 2012
In those earlier years he was called Alcides, or descendant of Alcaeus who was Amphitryon’s father.
From "Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes" by Edith Hamilton
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Thus his great metre, the Alcaic, has a character of stateliness and majesty in addition to the energy and impetus originally imparted to it by Alcaeus.
From Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 6 "Home, Daniel" to "Hortensius, Quintus" by Various
Thus Horace chose Alcaeus, Propertius chose Callimachus as his model.
From The Roman Poets of the Augustan Age: Virgil by Sellar, W. Y.
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