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Cyclades   /saɪklˈeɪdiz/  /sˈaɪklˌædz/   Listen
Cyclades

noun
1.
The Bronze Age civilization on the Cyclades islands in the southern Aegean Sea that flourished 3000-1100 BC.  Synonyms: Cycladic civilisation, Cycladic civilization, Cycladic culture.
2.
A group of over 200 islands in the southern Aegean.  Synonym: Kikladhes.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Cyclades" Quotes from Famous Books



... look for the Adventure. It was also in his contemplation to run as far west as the Tierra Austral del Espiritu Santo, which was discovered by Quiros, and to which M. de Bougainville has given the name of the Great Cyclades. From this land, it was the captain's plan to steer to the south, and so back to the east, between the latitudes of fifty and sixty. In the execution of this plan, it was his purpose, if possible, to attain the length of Cape ...
— Narrative of the Voyages Round The World, • A. Kippis

... says Ovid, "and that which lately was sea is a surface of parched sand, and the mountains which the deep sea has covered, start up and increase the number of the scattered Cyclades" (a cluster of islands in the gean Sea, surrounding Delos as though with a circle, whence their name); "the fishes sink to the bottom, and the crooked dolphins do not care to raise themselves on the surface into the air as usual. The bodies of sea-calves float ...
— Ragnarok: The Age of Fire and Gravel • Ignatius Donnelly

... alone, where the Nile breaks the rich dank soil, and where myriad cities pour their taxes into his treasuries. Ptolemy held lands also in Phoenicia, and Arabia; he claimed Syria and Libya and Aethiopia; he was lord of the distant Pamphylians, of the Cilicians, the Lycians and the Carians, and the Cyclades owned his mastery. Thus the wealth of the richest part of the world flowed into Alexandria, attracting thither the priests of strange religions, the possessors of Greek learning, the painters and sculptors whose work has left its traces on the ...
— Theocritus, Bion and Moschus rendered into English Prose • Andrew Lang

... from Carrara, Italy, is most esteemed on account of a pinkish tint given by a trace of oxide of iron. The best of Grecian marble was from Paros, one of the Cyclades. The isles of the Mediterranean are of limestone, or of volcanic, origin, often of both. 256. Calcium Sulphate occurs in two forms, (1) with water of crystallization—gypsum, CaSO4 2 H2O, —(2) ...
— An Introduction to Chemical Science • R.P. Williams



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