Tropæan

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See also: tropaean

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Latin tropae(us) (turning back”, “returning, adjective) + -an; from the Plinian phrase ventī tropaeī (sea-breezes, literally winds blowing from the sea towards the land), from Ancient Greek τροπαῖος (tropaîos, adjective) (also used in the noun phrase πνοή τροπαία (pnoḗ tropaía, an alternating wind, blowing back from sea to land)), from τρόπος (trópos, turning).

Pronunciation

Adjective

Tropæan (not comparable)

  1. (obsolete, rare, of an air current) Blowing from sea to land.
    • 1686, Robert Plot, chapter 2, in The Natural History of Staffordshire, page 44:
      The frequent rains brought by the Tropæan winds from the Irish Seas.

References

Proper noun

Tropæan

  1. (Greek and Roman antiquities, rare) An epithet of Jupiter and Zeus: turner to flight; he who puts to flight.
    • 1813, Sophocles (author) and R. Potter (translator), “Antigone” (lines 156–161) in The Tragedies of Sophocles, page 142:
      At the seven gates seven Argive warriors rag’d, / / But, Chief with daring Chief engag’d, / / Left to Tropæan Jove their glittering spoils.
    • 1898, Sir James George Frazer (translator), Pausanias’s Description of Greece I, page 152:
      The sanctuary of Tropaean (‘turner to flight’) Zeus was made by the Dorians after they had conquered the Amyclaeans and the rest of the Achaeans.

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