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Gyges

American  
[jahy-jeez] / ˈdʒaɪ dʒiz /

noun

Greek Mythology.
  1. Also Gyes one of the Hecatonchires.

  2. a shepherd who found a ring making its wearer invisible. Invited by the king of Lydia secretly to view his beautiful wife naked, Gyges was incited by her to kill the king and seize the throne. During his reign, allegedly, coinage was invented.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“The push into green nickel isn’t just for global competitive advantage,” said Christopher Gygès, New Caledonia’s minister for economy, foreign trade and energy.

From New York Times

Mr. Gygès, who campaigned against New Caledonian independence, added: “We are not China, we are not Indonesia, we are not the Philippines. We are France in the Pacific.”

From New York Times

Only when people are known do they become accountable for their actions, a finding that echoes Plato's story of the Ring of Gyges, in which the philosopher wonders if a man who became invisible would then go on to commit heinous acts.

From Salon

The question of hidden truths is found in Plato’s Republic, in the tale of the ring of Gyges, which makes its wearers invisible and thus allows them to go anywhere without fear of detection or consequences.

From The New Yorker

At the risk of sounding highfalutin, it sounds like the problem posed by Plato in “The Republic” about the ring of Gyges.

From New York Times