Atlas
See also: atlas
English
Etymology
From Latin Ātlās, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈætləs/
Proper noun
Atlas
- (Greek mythology) The son of Iapetus and Clymene, war leader of the Titans ordered by the god Zeus to support the sky on his shoulders; father to Hesperides, the Hyades, and the Pleiades; king of the legendary Atlantis.
- (astronomy) A moon of Saturn.
- (astronomy) A crater in the first quadrant of the moon.
- (astronomy) A triple star system in the Pleiades open cluster (M45) also known as 27 Tauri.
- (warfare, US) An intercontinental ballistic missile.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
Greek mythology
a moon of Saturn
a crater of the moon
a star in the Pleiades
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French
Etymology
From Latin Atlas, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a.tlas/
German
Etymology 1
From Latin Atlās or from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas), from the name of the mythological figure Ἄτλας (Átlas, “Bearer (of the Heavens)”).
Noun
Atlas m (genitive Atlas or Atlasses or Atlanten, plural Atlanten or Atlasse)
- (cartography or reference work) atlas (bound collection of maps)
- 1902, Geologisches Centralblatt, volume 2, page 17:
- In diesem System der Arbeitstheilung, sowie in der ungenügenden topographischen Grundlage 1 : 50 000 liegt auch die Schwäche des Atlasses, der gleichwohl für jene Zeit ein hervorragendes Werk darstellte.
- 1902, Geologisches Centralblatt, volume 2, page 17:
- atlas (bound collection of tables, illustrations on any subject)
- 2008, Frank H. Netter, translation by Roland Mühlbauer, Atlas der Anatomie, fourth edition, →ISBN, preface:
- Jeder von ihnen hat einen Abschnitt des Atlanten gegengelesen, korrigiert und auf den neuesten Stand gebracht.
- Each one of them checked, corrected, and brought a chapter of the atlas up to date.
- Jeder von ihnen hat einen Abschnitt des Atlanten gegengelesen, korrigiert und auf den neuesten Stand gebracht.
- 2008, Frank H. Netter, translation by Roland Mühlbauer, Atlas der Anatomie, fourth edition, →ISBN, preface:
- (medicine) atlas (uppermost vertebra of the neck)
- 1893, Deutsche Zeitschrift für Chirurgie, volume 35, edited by A. Lücke and E. Rose, page 559:
- Halswirbel zeigt sich an der rechten unteren Gelenkfläche des Atlas eine leicht bogenförmige, usurirte [sic] Linie im Gelenkknorpel: […]
- The cervical vertebra manifests on the right anterior articular surface of the atlas a slightly arcuate, abraded line in the articular cartilage: […]
- Halswirbel zeigt sich an der rechten unteren Gelenkfläche des Atlas eine leicht bogenförmige, usurirte [sic] Linie im Gelenkknorpel: […]
- 1893, Deutsche Zeitschrift für Chirurgie, volume 35, edited by A. Lücke and E. Rose, page 559:
- (uncommon) atlas (figure of a man used as a column)
Synonyms
- (figure of man used as column): Atlant
Proper noun
Atlas
- (Greek mythology) Atlas (son of Iapetus and Clymene, leader of the Titans ordered by Zeus to support the sky on his shoulders)
- (geography) the Atlas Mountains (mountain range in northwest Africa)
- (astronomy) Atlas (moon of Saturn)
- (astronomy) Atlas (star in the Pleiades)
- (astronomy) Atlas (crater in the first quadrant of the moon)
- (warfare, U.S.) Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile
Etymology 2
Borrowed from Arabic [Term?].
Latin
Etymology
From the name of the Ancient Greek mythological figure Ἄτλας (Átlas, “Bearer (of the Heavens)”).
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /ˈaːt.laːs/, [ˈaːt.ɫaːs]
Proper noun
Ātlās m (genitive Ātlantis); third declension
- (geography) A mountain in the Atlas Mountain Range in the former Kingdom of Mauretania, said to support the heavens.
- (Greek mythology) The Titan Atlas.
- Ovid Metamorphoses with an English translation by Frank Justus Miller. In two volumes, I, books I–VIII, 1951, page 224–225 containing Ovidus' Metamorphoses IV, 644–645:
- "tempus, Atla, veniet, tua quo spoliabitur auro
arbor, et hunc praedae titulum Iove natus habebit."- "Atlas, the time will come when your tree will be spoiled of its gold, and he who gets the glory of this spoil will be Jove's son."
- "tempus, Atla, veniet, tua quo spoliabitur auro
- Ovid Metamorphoses with an English translation by Frank Justus Miller. In two volumes, I, books I–VIII, 1951, page 224–225 containing Ovidus' Metamorphoses IV, 644–645:
Inflection
Third declension.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | Ātlās | Ātlantēs |
Genitive | Ātlantis | Ātlantum |
Dative | Ātlantī | Ātlantibus |
Accusative | Ātlantem | Ātlantēs |
Ablative | Ātlante | Ātlantibus |
Vocative | Ātlā | Ātlantēs |
References
- Atlas in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- Atlas in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français, Hachette
Portuguese

Atlas
Etymology
From Latin Atlas, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas), meaning "The Bearer (of the Heavens)", from Ἄ (Á), copulative prefix, + τλῆναι (tlênai, “to thole, suffer, endure, bear”), from Proto-Indo-European *tele (“to support, lift, weigh”).
Spanish
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