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Phaeacia

[ fee-ey-shuh ]

noun

Classical Mythology.
  1. an island nation on the shores of which Odysseus was shipwrecked and discovered by Nausicaä.


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Other Word Forms

  • ʳ󲹱·c noun adjective
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

As in Homer’s original, the story then leaps across the Mediterranean to Phaeacia, where the legend of Odysseus’s exploits in the war give spontaneous rise to a celebration performed by the D.R.E.A.M.

From

While Ulysses slept, alone and naked in an unknown land, a dream came to beautiful Nausicaa, the daughter of the King of that country, which is called Phaeacia.

From

While they sat amazed, he began, and told them the whole story of his adventures, from the day when he left Troy till he arrived at Calypso's island; he had already told them how he was shipwrecked on his way thence to Phaeacia.

From

Seventeen days he sailed, and on the eighteenth day he saw the shadowy mountain peaks of an island called Phaeacia.

From

Where the Homeric dwellers of Phaeacia Still live, and with a kiss meet East and West; Where with the olive tree the cypress blooms, A dark robe in the azure infinite, E'en there my soul has longed to dwell in peace With towering visions of the land of Pyrrhus; There dream-born beauties pour their flood, Dawn's mother Lighting the fountain of sweet Harmony.

From

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phacolitePhaeacian