Similar words: pathology, anthology, ornithology, psychology, morphology, methodology, pathological, ornithologist. Meaning: [mɪ'θɑlədʒɪ /-'θɒ-] n. 1. myths collectively; the body of stories associated with a culture or institution or person 2. the study of myths.
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31. We can quickly dispense with the crude mythology, but I like the concept of apparent failure.
32. In the new science of mythology, Max Muller was also advancing equally confident claims.
33. The mythology about Red Anthony was that he was the strongest man in Holoke, Massachusetts.
34. Comparative mythology combined with psychiatry is a mixture of dangerous brews.
35. She had no patience with the passive princesses of mythology.
35. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
36. Mythology and psychology also slide together, twine and part, joust and join again.
37. This recognition of mortality and the requirement to transcend it is the first great impulse to mythology.
38. Rhadamanthus, stern judge; in classical mythology, one of those in the infernal regions.
39. Erda, as she appears in Germanic mythology; and Cerridwen, goddess of intelligence and knowledge in Celtic mythology.
40. Nor can mosaic pavements offer any guidance, since their themes are commonly drawn from classical mythology.
41. Our task is to relate these spiritual realities to the theme of the biblical mythology of the deep.
42. As a kid, I read all the Norse mythology I could put my hands on.
43. The mythology of this just cause was not inevitably tragic, though usually so.
44. But the mythology of footwear began long before Dorothy stepped on to the yellow brick road.
45. The white glass has been carved with scenes from classical in mythology.
46. The passion with which the mythology of parliamentary sovereignty is defended ... baffles Paris and Bonn.
47. In ancient mythology it is guarded by a variety of monsters, or else it is difficult or dangerous to get to.
48. Primitive and Pagan myth comprise the East and West winds of mythology.
49. He asked that it be repeated, was told it came from Greco-Roman mythology, and proceeded to spell it with confidence.
50. Ancient mythology points up many of the ambivalent feelings people still have about the sea or the deep.
51. But away from the controlling mythology of the Western, his blood-dimmed vision lacked the same conviction.
52. In popular mythology poisonous snakes are always ready and waiting for the chance to strike out and kill their attackers.
53. In particular, the mythology was coming to be regarded as history - the first step towards trivialization and eventual nullity.
54. History paintings had to be grand and didactic, with subjects drawn from the Bible, classical mythology and history.
55. The value of the use of language to transmit information is well embedded in our cultural mythology.
56. He was in a continual process of rewriting his material and revising his mythology.
57. In any case, even within technical, i.e. classical mythology, Orpheus was a singer, not a fish.
58. Receptive reading of mythology can open up our perceptions of reality so that a vast web of interconnections becomes evident.
59. In popular mythology, gold is regarded as a good investment.
60. Nothing that we see in the park can quite fend off mythology.
More similar words: pathology, anthology, ornithology, psychology, morphology, methodology, pathological, ornithologist, ornithological, apology, zoology, theology, ecology, biology, geology, etiology, ideology, phonology, etymology, audiology, astrology, neurology, entomology, embryology, archeology, herpetology, gynecology, chronology, numerology, demonology.