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Laodamia

[ ley-od-uh-mahy-uh ]

noun

Classical Mythology.
  1. a daughter of Acastus who killed herself so that she could join her husband, Protesilaus, in the underworld.
  2. (in the Iliad ) the mother, by Zeus, of Sarpedon.


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Example Sentences

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They had Hermes bring him up from the dead to see once again his deeply mourning wife, Laodamia.

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Greek mythology also gave us Laodamia, who, devastated after the death of her husband in the Trojan war, had a bronze likeness made of him.

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When her father ordered it to be melted down, Laodamia was so distraught she threw herself in the furnace.

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With an inarticulate cry of joy, Laodamia beheld the beloved countenance of Protesilaus once more, and from his own lips heard the detailed account of his early death.

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Mr. Wordsworth's works are rich in quotations suitable to the various phases of human life; and his name will be remembered not by his "Peter Bell," or his "Idiot Boy," or even his "Wagoner," but by his "Excursion," his "Laodamia," his "Tintern Abbey," some twenty of his sonnets, his "Daisy," and his "Yarrow Unvisited."

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