2. Noun. (plural of titan) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Titans
1. titan [n] - See also: titan
Lexicographical Neighbors of Titans
Literary usage of Titans
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper: Including the Series by Samuel Johnson (1810)
"THE BATTLE OF THE GODS AND Titans. ... rush to arms : Here stalk the Titans of
portentous size, Burst from their dungeons, and assault the skies ! ..."
2. Greek and Roman [mythology] by William Sherwood Fox (1916)
"They established themselves on Mount Olympos, which stood directly opposite Mount
Othrys, the seat of the Titans, who, being the older race (with the ..."
3. The Progress of the Intellect: As Exemplified in the Religious Development by Robert William Mackay (1850)
"The conflict of Zeus with the Titans is said to be as the conflict of " Heaven
with Earth." v. 702. 1 Plut. Isis and Osiris, ch. 25. Strabo, x. 474. ..."
4. The American Cyclopaedia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge by Charles Anderson Dana (1876)
"The Titans, with the exception of Oceanus, were confined for ever in a subterranean
dungeon, ... The name of Titans was also given to their descendants. ..."
5. Orpheus by George Robert Stow Mead (1896)
"And these are the Titans. It is difficult to thread one's way through the legends
of the Builders and Titans, and their correspondences, the Curetes and ..."
6. The Classic Myths in English Literature: Based Chiefly on Bulfinch's "Age of by Charles Mills Gayley, Thomas Bulfinch (1893)
"With the gleam of the lightning the Titans were blinded, by the earthquake they
were laid low, with the flames they were well-nigh consumed : overpowered ..."
7. The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper: Including the Series by Samuel Johnson (1810)
"Here stalk the Titans of portentous size, Burst from their dungeons, ... And hurls
an hundred rocks from hundred hands: The Titans rush'd with fury ..."
8. The Progress of the Intellect: As Exemplified in the Religious Development by Robert William Mackay (1850)
"THE GIANTS AND Titans. The Giants and Titans belong to the same order of physical
beings, ... and they at last became identified with their brother Titans, ..."