cupid - ορισμός. Τι είναι το cupid
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Τι (ποιος) είναι cupid - ορισμός


cupid         
  • chariot]] of the war god, from the reign of [[Trajan]] (98–117 AD)
  • Caravaggio's ''Amor Vincit Omnia'']]
  • ''Cupid the Honey Thief'', by [[Lucas Cranach the Elder]]
  • ''[[Cupid Carving His Bow]]'' (1620s) by [[François Duquesnoy]], [[Bode Museum]], Berlin
  • ''Cupid Riding on a Dolphin'' (1630) by [[Erasmus Quellinus II]]
  • Tiepolo]]
  • A blindfolded, armed Cupid (1452/66) by [[Piero della Francesca]]
  • The god of love (Cupid) shoots an arrow at the lover, from a 14th-century text of the ''[[Roman de la Rose]]''.
  • ''Psyché et l'amour'' (1626–29) by [[Simon Vouet]]: Psyche lifts a lamp to view the sleeping Cupid.
  • Bronze ''Cupid Sleeping'' on a lion skin (1635–40), signed ''F,'' based on the marble attributed to [[Praxiteles]]
ROMAN DEITY, COUNTERPART OF EROS
Amor (mythology); Cupid's arrow; Cupid (holiday character); Dan Cupid
n. to play cupid
cupid         
  • chariot]] of the war god, from the reign of [[Trajan]] (98–117 AD)
  • Caravaggio's ''Amor Vincit Omnia'']]
  • ''Cupid the Honey Thief'', by [[Lucas Cranach the Elder]]
  • ''[[Cupid Carving His Bow]]'' (1620s) by [[François Duquesnoy]], [[Bode Museum]], Berlin
  • ''Cupid Riding on a Dolphin'' (1630) by [[Erasmus Quellinus II]]
  • Tiepolo]]
  • A blindfolded, armed Cupid (1452/66) by [[Piero della Francesca]]
  • The god of love (Cupid) shoots an arrow at the lover, from a 14th-century text of the ''[[Roman de la Rose]]''.
  • ''Psyché et l'amour'' (1626–29) by [[Simon Vouet]]: Psyche lifts a lamp to view the sleeping Cupid.
  • Bronze ''Cupid Sleeping'' on a lion skin (1635–40), signed ''F,'' based on the marble attributed to [[Praxiteles]]
ROMAN DEITY, COUNTERPART OF EROS
Amor (mythology); Cupid's arrow; Cupid (holiday character); Dan Cupid
also Cupid (cupids)
Cupid is the Roman god of love. He is usually shown as a baby boy with wings and a bow and arrow.
N-PROPER
If you say that someone is playing cupid, you mean that they are trying to bring two people together to start a romantic relationship.
...the aristocrat who played Cupid to the Duke and Duchess.
PHRASE
Cupid         
  • chariot]] of the war god, from the reign of [[Trajan]] (98–117 AD)
  • Caravaggio's ''Amor Vincit Omnia'']]
  • ''Cupid the Honey Thief'', by [[Lucas Cranach the Elder]]
  • ''[[Cupid Carving His Bow]]'' (1620s) by [[François Duquesnoy]], [[Bode Museum]], Berlin
  • ''Cupid Riding on a Dolphin'' (1630) by [[Erasmus Quellinus II]]
  • Tiepolo]]
  • A blindfolded, armed Cupid (1452/66) by [[Piero della Francesca]]
  • The god of love (Cupid) shoots an arrow at the lover, from a 14th-century text of the ''[[Roman de la Rose]]''.
  • ''Psyché et l'amour'' (1626–29) by [[Simon Vouet]]: Psyche lifts a lamp to view the sleeping Cupid.
  • Bronze ''Cupid Sleeping'' on a lion skin (1635–40), signed ''F,'' based on the marble attributed to [[Praxiteles]]
ROMAN DEITY, COUNTERPART OF EROS
Amor (mythology); Cupid's arrow; Cupid (holiday character); Dan Cupid
see cupid

Βικιπαίδεια

Cupid
In classical mythology, Cupid (Latin Cupīdō , meaning "passionate desire") is the god of desire, erotic love, attraction and affection. He is often portrayed as the son of the love goddess Venus and the god of war Mars.
Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για cupid
1. One card, featuring Bush as cupid, reads: My arrows are weapons of mass seduction!‘‘ Another with Sen.
2. DeMille; the Sabine women courageously calling timeout in battle; various mythological lovers like Cupid and Psyche in their porcelain embraces.
3. Cupid capitalism Americans don‘t scrimp when it comes to opening their wallets in the name of romance.
4. Cupid does not so much aim a well–targeted arrow as fire a scattergun in random directions.
5. Times are tough, explained Nawal Sehwel, the local cupid, and a college degree means an extra salary.