Crossword-Solution: TEIAN
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| TEIAN | anagram | ATEIN, EATIN, ENTAI, ENTIA, ETAIN, INATE, NIETA, TAENI, TAINE, TEAIN, TENAI, TENIA, TINEA |
We have 1 clue for the answer “TEIAN”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Of Teos, birthplace of Anacreon. | 1 answer |
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Powerful blow
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Hint 1 meaning
To boil with a continued bubbling or heaving and
rolling, with noise.
Hint 2 anagram
OLLWPA
Hint 3 another clue
BATTER ___
9 +1
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Sentences with TEIAN (5)
The Scian and the Teian muse, The hero’s harp, the lover’s lute, Have found the fame your shores refuse; Their place of birth alone is mute To sounds which echo further west Than your sires’ ‘Islands of the Blest.’ The mountains look on Marathon, And Marathon looks on the sea; And musing there an hour alone, I dreamed that Greece might still be free; For, standing on the Persians’ grave, I could not think myself a slave.
Thou shalt no longer, then, play the Teian with time, but, being ignorant of the myrtle and the vine, thou shalt bear about with thee thy shroud on the earth, as do the Moslemin at Mecca.” “Morella!” I cried, “Morella! how knowest thou this?” but she turned away her face upon the pillow and a slight tremor coming over her limbs, she thus died, and I heard her voice no more.
The Roman and Greek months have now little or no agreement; they say, however, the day on which Romulus began to build was quite certainly the thirtieth of the month, at which time there was an eclipse of the sun which they conceive to be that seen by Antimachus, the Teian poet, in the third year of the sixth Olympiad.
Nor so much did pleasant Lesbos mourn for Alcaeus, nor did the Teian town so greatly bewail her poet, while for thee more than for Archilochus doth Paros yearn, and not for Sappho, but still for thee doth Mytilene wail her musical lament; [_Here seven verses are lost_.] And in Syracuse Theocritus; but I sing thee the dirge of an Ausonian sorrow, I that am no stranger to the pastoral song, but heir of the Doric Muse which thou didst teach thy pupils.
Here, shelter'd by a friendly tree, In Teian measures you shall sing Bright Circe and Penelope, Love-smitten both by one sharp sting.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: NYT.
Used 1 time in crossword archives (1962).