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An ancient Greek dance imitating the motions of warfare
Answer for the clue "An ancient Greek dance imitating the motions of warfare ", 7 letters:
pyrrhic
Alternative clues for the word pyrrhic
Word definitions for pyrrhic in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 (context prosody English) Of or characterized by pyrrhics. 2 Relating to Pyrrhus, a Macedonian king, or some of his costly victories he had while fighting Rome. n. 1 An Ancient Greek war dance. 2 (context prosody English) A metric foot with two short ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"dance in armor" (1590s), also a type of metrical foot (1620s), from Latin pyrrhicha , from Greek pyrrikhe orkhesis , the war-dance of ancient Greece, traditionally named for its inventor, Pyrrikhos . The name means "reddish," from pyrros "flame-colored," ...
Usage examples of pyrrhic.
Who, had he stayed to husband her, had spun The strength he taxed unripened for his throw, In vengeful casts calamitous, On fields where palsying Pyrrhic laurels grow, The luminous the ruinous.
It added one more shade of pain to the already Pyrrhic victory, especially as he had no intention of letting Wrey know how he felt.
By the command, and after the example, of Narses, they repeated each day their military exercise on foot and on horseback, accustomed their ear to obey the sound of the trumpet, and practised the steps and evolutions of the Pyrrhic dance.
It felt to Sturgeon as though the battle in defense of the high ground to Haven's northeast was a pyrrhic victory.
The exegesis Fat labored on month after month struck me as a Pyrrhic victory if there ever was one-in this case an attempt by a beleaguered mind to make sense out of the inscrutable.
The exegesis Fat labored on month after month struck me as a Pyrrhic victory if there ever was one -- in this case an attempt by a beleaguered mind to make sense out of the inscrutable.
But for the British, though they now controlled Lake Champlain, it was a Pyrrhic victory: they had sustained losses far beyond what Arnolds flotilla might have been expected to inflict, and the season was too advanced for them to attempt to subdue Fort Ticonderoga and extend their supply lines into New York.
But for the British, though they now controlled Lake Champlain, it was a Pyrrhic victory: they had sustained losses far beyond what Arnold’.
He was, indeed, cheating death now, but he knew it was, at best, a Pyrrhic victory which, his father had taught him, was no victory at all.
But even if the Phinons destroyed the Earth, the Phinons were dead in the ultimate Pyrrhic victory.
And because the reproductive impulse is the oldest and least rational of all our primitive drives, the least amenable to reason, there, I suspect, is where the battle has been fought and where we may well have won the Pyrrhic victory to end all Pyrrhic victories.
Galveston had eluded pursuit and reported in, but Bangor had been lost in the strike against Orland, and that was a Pyrrhic victory at best.
The manipulation of the human desire for peace had backfired, their collective rage turning the enemy back, though at best it was a Pyrrhic victory.
But his was a Pyrrhic victory, and before his messengers had had time to reach Edinburgh with news of his triumph, his mauled and battered army had been almost extirpated at the hands of Eannruig of Macintosh and Clan Chattan, who had been marching a few days behind the Campbells and Siol Alpine.
Still she'd fought against the more terrifying of her ancestors, winning for a time a Pyrrhic victory which had lasted through childhood.