우칼레곤

Ucalegon
18세기 트로이의 약탈을 묘사한 것

우칼레곤(고대 그리스어: ολαλ)))은 트로이의 장로 중 한 명으로 아카이인들이 도시를 약탈했을 때 그의 집에 불을 질렀다.그는 일리아드[1]있는 프리아미의 친구 중 한 명이며, 그의 집의 파괴는 아이네이드[2]언급되어 있다.

그는 쥬베날 [3]풍자에 언급되어 있다.그의 이름은 그리스어로 "걱정하지 마세요"로 번역됩니다.이 이름은 "집에 불이 난 이웃"의 어원이 되었고, 뉴욕 타임즈 크로스워드 퍼즐의 편집자인 윌 쇼츠는 이 단어가 영어에서 [4]그가 가장 좋아하는 단어라고 말했다.

문헌에서의 사용법

  • François Rabelais; Peter Anthony Motteux (1694). "XXII". Gargantua and Pantagruel. Vol. IV. But who is this Ucalegon below, that cries and makes such a sad moan?
  • Eneas Sweetland Dallas (1866). "Sans Merci: Or, Kestrels and Falcons". Once A Week. p. 244. If Seyton's own roof-tree was still unsinged, the fire had made wild work, of late, with his neighbours' dwellings; and, from the disaster of the last of these unlucky Ucalegons, he was divided by a thin party-wall.
  • Thomas Frederick Kirby (1892). "Chapter 1". Annals of Winchester College. p. 333. One of them, Peter Chamberlin, was burnt out; but this Ucalegon lived next door to the Castle, and suffered in consequence.
  • Edwin Arlington Robinson (1897). The Point of View. Scribner's Magazine. Vol. 66. p. 764. Ucalegon he lost his house, when Agamemnon came to Troy; but who can tell me who he was, I'll pray the gods to give him joy.
  • Elizabeth Hand (1992). "Chapter 2". Aestival Tide. The moujiks had names for these hurricanes. They believed that there were really only two of them, Baratdaja the Healing Wind and Ucalegon the Prince of Storms, and that they returned decade after decade to batter the domes like the hands of some monstrous lunatic.
  • Iain M Banks (2010). "Chapter 19". Surface Detail. The Jhlupian heavy cruiser Ucalegon – forty times as fast as any ship possessed by the Sichultian Enablement...

동명인

외부 링크

레퍼런스

  1. ^ 일리아드(3.148)
  2. ^ Aeneid (2.312)
  3. ^ Juvenal; Peter Green (1998). "Chapter 1". The Sixteen Satires. Vol. III. ISBN 0-14-044704-0. The 'heroic downstairs neighbour' of 198-9 if given by J. the Trojan name of Ucalegon. In Virgil's Aeneid (2.311) as Troy burns, Aeneas sees the nearby house go up in flames (Latin: iam proximus ardet Ucalegon): but by now (J. seems to be saying) the Trojan (or his descendant) has learned by experience - been there, done that - and has the sense both to occupy a ground-floor apartment and to shift his stuff to safety in good time. (Latin: iam friuola transfert Ucalegon). Roman listeners, who knew the Aeneid more or less by heart, would appreciate the parody.
  4. ^ "15 Questions with Will Shortz". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 12 April 2012.