corypheus
English
Alternative forms
- coryphæus
- coryphaeus
- koryphaios
Etymology
From Latin coryphaeus, from Ancient Greek κορυφαῖος (koruphaîos, “leader”), from κορυφή (koruphḗ, “head”).
Noun
corypheus (plural corypheuses or coryphei)
- (drama, historical) The conductor or leader of the dramatic chorus in Ancient Greece.
- (by extension) The chief or leader of a party or interest.
- That noted corypheus of the Independent faction. — South.
- 1800, Prosper Guéranger, Laurence Shepherd (translator), The Liturgical Year: The Time after Pentecost, Volume 3, page 443,
- Let us blithely hail, throughout the whole universe, these disciples of Christ, these two Coryphei, Peter and Paul : O Peter, the Foundation-stone and Rock ; and thou also, O Paul, Vessel of Election.
- 1940, Charles Sanders Peirce, Philosophical Writings of Peirce, page 270:
- Chauncey Wright, something of a philosophical celebrity in those days, was never absent from our meetings. I was about to call him our corypheus; but he will better be described as our boxing-master whom we—I particularly—used to face to be severely pummelled.
- 1992, Demetres P. Tryphonopoulos, The Celestial Tradition: A Study of Ezra Pound's The Cantos, page 36:
- The Gnostic depreciation of the cosmos and its creator aroused the ire of the founder and corypheus of the Neoplatonic School, Plotinus (205-70), who presided over an academia in Rome and possibly had a private mystical practice.
Synonyms
- (leader of a dramatic chorus in Ancient Greece):
- (chief or leader of a party or interest): coryphe
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