odysseys in English

noun
1
a Greek epic poem traditionally ascribed to Homer, describing the travels of Odysseus during his ten years of wandering after the fall of Troy. He eventually returned home to Ithaca and killed the suitors who had plagued his wife Penelope during his absence.

Use "odysseys" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "odysseys" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "odysseys", or refer to the context using the word "odysseys" in the English Dictionary.

1. Blak Iz Blak Lyrics: * Canibus, Charli Baltimore, Gano Grills, MC Serch, Mos Def, Mums * / Peep the math / Mau Mau be about land and freedom / Reparation and apologies, for Africa to America odysseys

2. Having done quirky piano pop, funk odysseys, improvised collaborative instrumentals and ambient soundtracks to 1920s documentaries about fisherman, maybe it’s not too outlandish after all to expect the Brewises to do stadium rock for album six.

3. Much wondered at, therefore, is the censure of Dionysius Longinus, (a man otherwise affirmed grave and of elegant judgment,) comparing Homer in his Iliads to the Sun rising, in his Odysseys to his descent or setting, or to the ocean robbed of his Aesture, many tributary floods and rivers of excellent ornament withheld from their observance

4. The Byronic Hero in Film, Fiction, and Television bridges nineteenth- and twentieth-century studies in pursuit of an ambitious, antisocial, arrogant, and aggressively individualistic mode of hero from his inception in Byron’s Manfred, Childe Harold, and Cain, through his incarnations as the protagonists of Westerns, action films, space odysseys, vampire novels, neo-Gothic comics, and sci-fi

5. Much wondered at, therefore, is the censure of Dionysius Longinus, (a man otherwise affirmed grave and of elegant judgment,) comparing Homer in his Iliads to the Sun rising, in his Odysseys to his descent or setting, or to the ocean robbed of his Aesture, many tributary floods and rivers of excellent ornament withheld from their observance.