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Answer for the clue "The Fate who determines the length of the thread of life ", 8 letters:
lachesis

Alternative clues for the word lachesis

Word definitions for lachesis in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Lachesis (; , Lakhesis , "disposer of lots", from , lanchano , "to obtain by lot, by fate, or by the will of the gods"), in ancient Greek religion , was the second of the Three Fates, or Moirai : Clotho , Lachesis and Atropos . Normally seen clothed in ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (cx homeopathy English) The venom of ''Lachesis mutus'', the bushmaster snake, used to treat various conditions. n. (context Greek god English) One of the three Fates (Moirae), daughter of Zeus and Themis; the measurer of each thread of life. Her Roman ...

Usage examples of lachesis.

Particulars and Universals alike it is established that to the first of those known as the Fates, to Clotho the Spinner, must be due the unity and as it were interweaving of all that exists: Lachesis presides over the Lots: to Atropos must necessarily belong the conduct of mundane events.

For Particulars and Universals alike it is established that to the first of those known as the Fates, to Clotho the Spinner, must be due the unity and as it were interweaving of all that exists: Lachesis presides over the Lots: to Atropos must necessarily belong the conduct of mundane events.

The Hour -- glass seemed to have become a cablecar, cruising along the cables, carrying Norton and Lachesis with it.

So she removed her yellow cloak-there was no mandatory color-coding, but it seemed that Clotho traditionally wore yellow, Lachesis brown, and Atropos gray-and laid it on the path.

Thus Niobe, as Clotho, would sleep, then keep Atropos company for her shift, then assume the office while Atropos slept and Lachesis kept her company.

So after Lachesis had analyzed, measured, and marked each potential life, on the endless thread Clotho spun, Atropos would cut and place it.

Niobe had become Clotho, in large part, because the prior Clotho had liked her, and now was Lachesis because the three Aspects had agreed she was needed.

Then Niobe explained the three jobs: how Clotho spun the threads of life, Lachesis measured them, and Atropos cut them to their lengths.

Niobe said, and flashed through the Clotho and Atropos Aspects for him before returning to Lachesis.

The Parcae, or Fates, of classical mythology were Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, the arbiters of birth, life, and death.

Metis scowled, tapping her foot impatiently as she waited for the three Muses to catch up with her and Lachesis.

Lachesis planned these threads with an eye to the esthetics of the larger picture.

Lachesis had described it precisely, so Norton would know it without fail.