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Dionysiac
[ dahy-uh-nis-ee-ak, -nahy-see- ]
Dionysiac
/ ˌdaɪəˈnɪzɪˌæk /
adjective
- of or relating to Dionysus or his worship
- a less common word for Dionysian
Other Words From
- Di·o·ny·si·a·cal·ly [dahy-, uh, -ni-, sahy, -ik-lee], adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of Dionysiac1
Example Sentences
“And that, to me, is the terrible seduction of Dionysiac ritual. Hard for us to imagine. That fire of pure being.”
“Do you remember last fall, in Julian’s class, when we studied what Plato calls telestic madness? Bakcheia? Dionysiac frenzy?”
And she knows that when characters like those of “Shipwreck” are faced with what seems inexplicable to them, their so-called enlightened minds may find themselves wandering into primal, mythic realms — where there be dragons and demons and amoral Dionysiac gods.
But for those who love McLean’s music, it’s essential listening; it captures his full, overtone-rich in-concert sound as well as his explosive solos, which, at times, reach a Dionysiac frenzy.
A marble head of a deity wearing a Dionysiac fillet, from the first century A.D.
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