brazen age
English
editNoun
editthe brazen age (singulare tantum)
- (mythology) The third of the four mythological ages of mankind, said to come between the silver and the iron age.
- 1841, Elphinstone, Hist. India, volume I, page 257:
- These last bear some resemblance to the golden, silver, brazen, and iron ages of the Greeks.
- (Greek linguistics) The middle Koine chronolect of the Greek language, C.E. c. 1–c. 300.
- 1855, Evangelinos Apostolides Sophocles, A Greek Grammar, for the Use of Schools and Colleges, a new edition, Hartford: William James Hamersley, Introduction, pages 5–6:
- With respect to purity, the Greek, like any other dead language, may be said to have seen four different ages; the golden, silver, brazen, and iron ages. The writers of the silver and brazen ages are often called the later Greek writers, and their language the later Greek.
- 〃, page 7:
- Brazen Age. — From A. D. 1 to about A. D. 300.
Translations
editmyth: third age of man, after the silver age and before the iron age
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mid-Koine Greek, AD c. 1–c. 300
Further reading
edit- James A. H. Murray et al., editors (1884–1928), “Brazen, a. 4. Phrases. Brazen age”, in A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles (Oxford English Dictionary), volume I (A–B), London: Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 1066, column 1.