• Endymion

    Pronunciation

    • IPA: /É›nˈdɪmiÉ™n/

    Origin

    From Ancient Greek Ἐνδυμίων

    Full definition of Endymion

    Proper noun

    Endymion

    (plural Endymions)
    1. (Greek mythology) A man, loved by Selene or Artemis (the two being often conflated) and variously a handsome Aeolian shepherd, hunter, or king, who was said to rule and live at Olympia in Elis, as well as being venerated and said to reside in Caria, southwest Asia Minor, on Mount Latmus.
      • a. 1864 Walter Savage Landon, Pericles and Aspasia, Little, Brown, and Company, Boston, 1905, page 82,The heavenly bodies may keep their secrets two or three thousand years yet; but one or other of them will betray them to some wakeful favorite, some Endymion beyond Latmos, perhaps in regions undiscovered, certainly in uncalculated times.
    2. (astronomy) 342 Endymion, an asteroid.
    3. (astronomy) A crater on the Moon.

    Usage notes

    Notably the eponymous protagonist of John Keats' 1818 narrative poem Endymion, which adapts the myth and describes him as a "shepherd prince" at Mount Latmus.

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