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Definition of Lydian in English: Lydianadjective ˈlɪdɪənˈlɪdiən Relating to or characteristic of the ancient region of Lydia in western Asia Minor or its inhabitants. a Lydian girl who is an excellent weaver Example sentencesExamples - He mentioned in his writings the Lydian king Gyges, who died c. 652 BC, and a total solar eclipse which was almost certainly that of 6 April 648.
- Fans of archaeology shouldn't miss the Istanbul Archaeological Museums which are exhibiting the Sarcophagus of Alexander the Great and various Lydian tombs.
- The Lydian coins they excavated are mostly dated to the seventh and earlier sixth centuries BCE.
noun ˈlɪdɪənˈlɪdiən 1A native or inhabitant of the ancient region of Lydia in western Asia Minor. they were conquered in the sixth century by Lydians Example sentencesExamples - The view that coinage was invented by the Lydians is one that is generally accepted by scholars.
- At the beginning of the second book of Plato's Republic, Glaucon challenges Socrates, and his idea of justice, with a myth concerning the ancestor of Gyges, the Lydian.
- Although the treasury of King Croesus held great quantities of gold and silver plate, the Lydians clearly loved fine ceramic wares imported from Greece.
2The Anatolian language of the Lydians, of which some inscriptions and other texts have survived in a version of the Greek alphabet. 吕底亚语 Example sentencesExamples - A tablet was turned up which revealed a bilingual inscription in Lydian and Aramaic.
- Lydian has personal suffixes like the Semitic languages.
- Most of the datable inscriptions from Sardis before the Hellenistic period use the Lydian language and alphabet.
Rhymesascidian, Derridean, Dravidian, enchiridion, Euclidean, Floridian, Gideon, meridian, Numidian, obsidian, Pisidian, quotidian, viridian Definition of Lydian in US English: Lydianadjectiveˈlidēənˈlɪdiən Relating to or characteristic of the ancient region of Lydia in western Asia Minor or its inhabitants. a Lydian girl who is an excellent weaver Example sentencesExamples - The Lydian coins they excavated are mostly dated to the seventh and earlier sixth centuries BCE.
- Fans of archaeology shouldn't miss the Istanbul Archaeological Museums which are exhibiting the Sarcophagus of Alexander the Great and various Lydian tombs.
- He mentioned in his writings the Lydian king Gyges, who died c. 652 BC, and a total solar eclipse which was almost certainly that of 6 April 648.
nounˈlidēənˈlɪdiən 1A native or inhabitant of the ancient region of Lydia in western Asia Minor. they were conquered in the sixth century by Lydians Example sentencesExamples - Although the treasury of King Croesus held great quantities of gold and silver plate, the Lydians clearly loved fine ceramic wares imported from Greece.
- The view that coinage was invented by the Lydians is one that is generally accepted by scholars.
- At the beginning of the second book of Plato's Republic, Glaucon challenges Socrates, and his idea of justice, with a myth concerning the ancestor of Gyges, the Lydian.
2The Anatolian language of the Lydians, of which some inscriptions and other texts have survived in a version of the Greek alphabet. 吕底亚语 Example sentencesExamples - Most of the datable inscriptions from Sardis before the Hellenistic period use the Lydian language and alphabet.
- A tablet was turned up which revealed a bilingual inscription in Lydian and Aramaic.
- Lydian has personal suffixes like the Semitic languages.
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