Associations to the word «Pindar»
Noun
- Ode
- Thebes
- Herodotus
- Heracles
- Zeus
- Hera
- Poseidon
- Plutarch
- Homer
- Iliad
- Plato
- Ovid
- Perseus
- Athena
- Apollo
- Artemis
- Prometheus
- Papyrus
- Aphrodite
- Chariot
- Athenian
- Horace
- Corinth
- Odysseus
- Tyrant
- Argonaut
- Orpheus
- Olympia
- Poet
- Hymn
- Hermes
- Mortal
- Muse
- Allusion
- Virgil
- Eros
- Olympus
- Syracuse
- Byzantium
- Divination
- Oracle
- Fragment
- Hades
- Myth
- Sicily
- Socrates
- Rhodes
- Odyssey
- Aristotle
- Greek
- Tripod
- Thunderbolt
- Poetry
- Castor
- Medusa
- Achilles
- Hind
- Athens
- Dryden
- Nymph
- Persuasion
- Purcell
- Pliny
- Scarborough
- Lexicon
- Contemporary
- Rutherford
- Poem
- Centaur
- Sparta
- Afterlife
- Immortality
- Bc
- Verse
- Epithet
- Seer
- Antiquity
Adjective
Wiktionary
PINDAR, proper noun. (ca. 522–443 BC) A great Ancient Greek lyric poet from Thebes
PINDAR, noun. Alternative form of pinder or pindal ("peanut").
Dictionary definition
PINDAR, noun. Greek lyric poet remembered for his odes (518?-438? BC).
Wise words
Men govern nothing with more difficulty than their tongues,
and can moderate their desires more than their words.