Eris
English
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Eris's planetary symbol
Etymology
Borrowed from Ancient Greek Ἔρις (Éris), from ἔρις (éris, “strife”).
See also Eris (mythology)#Etymology on Wikipedia.Wikipedia and
Eris (dwarf planet)#Name on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɪəɹɨs/, /ˈɛɹɨs/
Proper noun
Eris
- (Greek mythology) The goddess of discord and strife, whose apple of discord sparked events that eventually led to the Trojan War; equated by Homer with Enyo (goddess of violent war) and identified with the Roman goddess Discordia;
(religion, Discordianism) the same figure as principal deity of Discordianism, regarded as the goddess of disorder.- 1992, Samuel Ijsseling, Eros and Eris: The Trojan War and Heidegger on the Essence of Truth, Paul van Tongeren, Paul Sars, Chris Bremmers, Koen Boey (editors), Eros and Eris: Contributions to a Hermeneutical Phenomenology Liber Amicorum for Adriaan Peperzak, Kluwer Academic, page 2,
- According to Homer, the Trojan war is, above all, an affair of the gods. It is about Eris, a sister of the god of war Ares, and about Eros, not directly named by Homer, but who in the figure of Aphrodite, the god of love, plays a central role on the side of the Trojans. Eris is the one who divides gods, mortals, and things from each other; Eros is the one who brings them together.
- 1993, Herman Parret, The Aesthetics of Communication: Pragmatics and Beyond, Springer, Softcover reprint, page 18,
- Eris, "the Strife with the violent heart", one reads in Hesiod's Theogony, is a child of the Night, and "Hateful Struggle gave birth to painful Distress and Distraction and Famine and tearful Sorrow; also Wars and Battles and Murders and Slaughters; also Feuds and Lying Words and Angry Words".
- 2003, Adam Gorightly, The Prankster and the Conspiracy: The Story of Kerry Thornley and How He Met Oswald and Inspired the Counterculture, Paraview Press, page 58,
- According to Newport, no specific bowling alley can claim to be the site of the birth of the Discordian movement. It evolved at several different bowling alleys. This revelation came as a devastating disappointment to your humble author, who—in the course of writing this book—had planned a grand religious pilgrimage to this envisioned holy site, where I would snap sacred photos of "The Brunswick Shrine," and perhaps even fall to my knees before this fabled Mecca of Discordianism, bowing to the Goddess Eris.
- 2006, Margot Adler, Drawing Down the Moon: Witches, Druids, Goddess-worshippers, and Other Pagans in America, Penguin, page 351,
- And yet Erisianism should not be treated frivolously. Greg Hill told me his experiences with Eris had been quite profound. Although it started as an atheistic joke, his perceptions began to change.
- 1992, Samuel Ijsseling, Eros and Eris: The Trojan War and Heidegger on the Essence of Truth, Paul van Tongeren, Paul Sars, Chris Bremmers, Koen Boey (editors), Eros and Eris: Contributions to a Hermeneutical Phenomenology Liber Amicorum for Adriaan Peperzak, Kluwer Academic, page 2,
- (astronomy) The celestial body 136199 Eris, the most-massive known dwarf planet in the Solar System and the largest known object in the scattered disk; formerly nicknamed Xena.
- 2013, Fred Watson, Star-Craving Mad: Tales from a Travelling Astronomer, Allen & Unwin, page 35,
- Today, Xena is no longer Xena but has been officially renamed Eris, after the Greek goddess of strife and discord—which hints at the climate in planetary science at the time. Its moon has a similarly appropriate name, Dysnomia (lawlessness) in Greek mythology, the daughter of Eris. Observations of Eris and Dysnomia have confirmed that Eris is 27 per cent more massive than Pluto, though of a similar diameter.
- 2013, Fred Watson, Star-Craving Mad: Tales from a Travelling Astronomer, Allen & Unwin, page 35,
- An unincorporated community in Champaign County, Ohio, United States.
Usage notes
- (Greek mythology):
- Classical references to Eris apparently relate to either of two different goddesses.
- For more details see
Eris (mythology)#Characteristics in Greek mythology on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- (Discordian goddess):
- In Discordian contexts, Eris is sometimes described as the Greek goddess of chaos; strictly speaking, however, this role is attributed to her only within Discordianism, and not in Greek mythology.
- (dwarf planet):
- Due to a delay in classifying the object (ultimately, as a dwarf planet), and thus in officially naming it, it became widely known by the nickname used by the discovery team: Xena, after the titular character of the TV series Xena: Warrior Princess. Its satellite was similarly nicknamed Gabrielle, after the principal supporting character.
Synonyms
- (goddess): Discordia (Roman mythology)
- (dwarf planet):
- (official designation): 136199 Eris, (136199) Eris
- (alternative designations): 2003 UB313, (136199) 2003 UB313, 136199 Eris (2003 UB313) (See
Provisional designation in astronomy on Wikipedia.Wikipedia )
- Xena (informal, obsolete)
- (astronomy, astrology): ⯰
- (astrology): ⯱
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
- Eridian
- Erisian
- Erisianism
- Eris I
Related terms
- Aneris
- eristic
Translations
Greek goddess of discord
|
dwarf planet
|
See also
- apple of discord
- (most likely dwarf planets of the Solar System) Ceres, Orcus, Pluto, Haumea, Quaoar, Makemake, Gonggong, Eris, Sedna
Further reading
Eris (mythology) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Judgement of Paris#Mythic narrative on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Discordianism#Mythology on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Eris (dwarf planet) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
IAU definition of planet on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
List of most distant trans-Neptunian objects on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Eris in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)
Albanian
Etymology
From erë (“wind”), probably contaminated with Ancient Greek ἔρις (éris, “strife”).
Czech
Etymology
From Ancient Greek Ἔρις (Éris).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈɛrɪs]
- Hyphenation: Eris
Proper noun
Eris f
- (Greek mythology) Eris, the goddess of discord, confusion, and strife
- 2014, Rudolf Mertlík, Příběhy Odysseovy, Praha: Albatros, →ISBN, page 9:
- Ve svatební síni se shromáždili všichni nebešťané kromě Eridy, bohyně sváru. Svatebčané se chtěli nerušeně radovat […] Proto Eridu nepozvali, neboť kam ona vkročí, tam vznikají spory a hádky. Eris jim však urážku neodpustila.
- All the heaven-borns besides Eris gathered in the wedding hall. The wedding guests did not want to be disturb while rejoicing […] That was why they had not invited Eris, because there arise quarrels and conflicts where she enters. However, Eris did not forgive them the offence.
- (astronomy, indeclinable) Eris, a dwarf planet and a large Kuiper belt object
- 2017 October 12, “Jako šišatý Saturn. Vědci našli u trpasličí planety Haumea prstenec”, in Česká televize.cz:
- Haumea byla uznána Mezinárodní astronomickou unií v roce 2008 a je jednou z pěti trpasličích planet vedle Pluta, Ceres, Eris a Makemake.
- Haumea was acknowledged by the International Astronomical Union in 2008 and is one of the five dwarf planets together with Pluto, Ceres, Eris and Makemake.
Usage notes
The name of the goddess Eris is inflected following the Czech declension rules of feminine names of Greek origin, but when referring to the dwarf planet, the name is usually not inflected in practical usage and keeps the basic form Eris in all grammatical cases.
Declension
(goddess):
Derived terms
German
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Italian
Etymology
From Ancient Greek Ἔρις (Éris).
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈeɾis/ [ˈe.ɾis]
- Rhymes: -eɾis
- Syllabification: E‧ris
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