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Homer   /hˈoʊmər/   Listen
Homer

noun
1.
A base hit on which the batter scores a run.  Synonym: home run.
2.
Ancient Greek epic poet who is believed to have written the Iliad and the Odyssey (circa 850 BC).
3.
An ancient Hebrew unit of capacity equal to 10 baths or 10 ephahs.  Synonym: kor.
4.
United States painter best known for his seascapes (1836-1910).  Synonym: Winslow Homer.
5.
Pigeon trained to return home.  Synonym: homing pigeon.
verb
1.
Hit a home run.



Home

adjective
1.
Used of your own ground.  Antonym: away.
2.
Relating to or being where one lives or where one's roots are.
3.
Inside the country.  Synonyms: interior, internal, national.  "The nation's internal politics"



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"Homer" Quotes from Famous Books



... that his opponent must be possessed of some truths, in spite of his trying to defend other positions which are indefensible. Strange! that a thing which it seems so easy to avoid, should so seldom be avoided! Homer said well: ...
— The Fair Haven • Samuel Butler

... Factory Inspector, L. Homer, October, 1844: "The state of things in the matter of wages is greatly perverted in certain branches of cotton manufacture in Lancashire; there are hundreds of young men, between twenty and thirty, employed as piecers and otherwise, ...
— The Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844 - with a Preface written in 1892 • Frederick Engels

... The works of Homer are supposed to have done great injury to mankind by inspiring the love of military glory. Alexander was said to sleep with them always on his pillow. How like a mad butcher amid a flock of sheep appears the hero of the Iliad, in the following fine lines of Mr. Pope, ...
— Zoonomia, Vol. II - Or, the Laws of Organic Life • Erasmus Darwin

... poet in the most unconscious manner hints here the tragic limitation of his people and his epoch. It is a hint of which we, looking back through more than twenty-five centuries can see the full meaning, as that meaning has unfolded itself in the ages. Time is also a commentator on Homer and has written down, in that alphabet of his, called events, the true interpretation of the old poet. Still the letters of Time's alphabet have also to be learned and require not ...
— Homer's Odyssey - A Commentary • Denton J. Snider

... that we find he has been a manual with men the most diverse in their natures, culture, and pursuits. Dante ranks him next after Homer. Montaigne, as might be expected, knows him by heart. Fenelon and Bossuet never weary of quoting him. La Fontaine polishes his own exquisite style upon his model; and Voltaire calls him "the best of preachers." ...
— Horace • Theodore Martin


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