Noun | 1. | ![]() classical mythology - the system of mythology of the Greeks and Romans together; much of Roman mythology (especially the gods) was borrowed from the Greeks Graeco-Roman deity, Greco-Roman deity - a deity of classical mythology Echo - (Greek mythology) a nymph who was spurned by Narcissus and pined away until only her voice remained Atlantides, Hesperides - (Greek mythology) group of 3 to 7 nymphs who guarded the golden apples that Gaea gave as a wedding gift to Hera Hyades - (Greek mythology) 7 daughters of Atlas and half-sisters of the Pleiades; they nurtured the infant Dionysus and Zeus placed them among the stars as a reward Oread - (Greek mythology) one of the mountain nymphs Pleiades - (Greek mythology) 7 daughters of Atlas and half-sisters of the Hyades; placed among the stars to save them from the pursuit of Orion water nymph - (Greek mythology) any nymph of the water Daphne - (Greek mythology) a nymph who was transformed into a laurel tree to escape the amorous Apollo dryad, wood nymph - a deity or nymph of the woods Salmacis - nymph who merged with Hermaphroditus to form one body |
2. | nymph - a larva of an insect with incomplete metamorphosis (as the dragonfly or mayfly) larva - the immature free-living form of most invertebrates and amphibians and fish which at hatching from the egg is fundamentally unlike its parent and must metamorphose | |
3. | ![]() adult female, woman - an adult female person (as opposed to a man); "the woman kept house while the man hunted" |