Deianira (mythology)

In Greek mythology, Deianira (/ˌdeɪ.əˈnaɪrə/; Greek: Δηϊάνειρα, Dēiáneira, or Δῃάνειρα, Dēáneira, [dɛːiáneːra]) was the name of three individuals whose name meant as "man-destroyer"[1] or "destroyer of her husband".[2][3]

Notes

  1. P. Walcot, "Greek Attitudes towards Women: The Mythological Evidence" Rome, 2nd Series, 31:1:43 (April 1984); at JSTOR
  2. Koine. Y. (editor in chief), Kenkyusha's New English-Japanese Dictionary, 5th ed., Kenkyusha, 1980, p.551.
  3. Antoninus Liberalis, Metamorphoses sv. Deianira with Notes and Commentary on Meleagrides p.111
  4. Hesiod, Ehoiai fr. 25
  5. Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica 4.16.3
  6. Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Antiquitates Romanae 1.11.2 & 1.13.1
  7. Greek Papyri III No. 140b
gollark: Anyway, you could just write code for doing so for a 1D array, and then code for filling 10 N-1-dimensional arrays and merging them into a N-dimensional array
gollark: *Why* are you making a 5D array in the first place?
gollark: Also, IPv4 addresses are not very cheap.
gollark: I believe you'd need your ISP to allow BGP things which they probably don't.
gollark: It would be hard for them to introduce horrible bugs given that it's basically a Chromium wrapper, from the sounds of it.

References

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