Examples of using Polyphemus in English and their translations into Spanish
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as Limulus polyphemus or Tachypleus tridentatus.
the type species is Bravoceratops polyphemus.
a satyr who has been captured by Polyphemus during his search for the wild god Pan.
Hero and Leander, Polyphemus and numerous others.
an aqueous extract of amebocytes from the Atlantic horseshoe crab(Limulus polyphemus), is commonly used in a test to detect bacterial endotoxins.
This must be the boulder Polyphemus used to trap Odysseus… when he was returning from the Trojan War.
Knowing his name, Polyphemus was able to call upon Odysseus the revenge of his father, the god Poseidon.
Besides… it's quite possible the Oracle wasn't referring to what would unfold on Polyphemus' island.
named for the Polyphemus of Greek mythology.
In the Fable of Polyphemus and Galatea, for example,
Polyphemus is a Monasterenser Magnaserm,
For related species in North America that are also called gopher tortoises, see Gopherus The gopher tortoise(Gopherus polyphemus) is a species of the Gopherus genus native to the southeastern United States.
Additionally, when Angel is revealed to have the power to regenerate lost limbs, Polyphemus reveals that this is due to a mystical upheaval that is changing the world both naturally and supernaturally.
gopher tortoises(Gopherus polyphemus), frosted flatwoods salamanders(Ambystoma cingulatum),
have now reached a moon of the planet Polyphemus containing large quantity of this material.
Galatea is also the name of Polyphemus's object of desire in Theocritus's Idylls VI and XI and is linked with Polyphemus again in the myth of Acis and Galatea in Ovid's Metamorphoses.
chorus warns Acis and Galatea about the arrival of a monstrous giant, Polyphemus, singing"no joy shall last.
the blinding of Polyphemus, the theft of the Palladium
The result was his best-known work, Polyphemus Surprising Acis
Reference to the use of Coto Donana as a hunting lodge is made in the first verses of the La Fábula de Polifemo y Galatea(Fable of Polyphemus and Galatea), which the lyric poet Luis de Góngora dedicated to the Count of Niebla,