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Augean stables
[ aw-jee-uhn stey-buhlz ]
plural noun
- the stables in which King Augeas kept 3,000 oxen, and which had not been cleaned for 30 years. The cleaning of these stables was accomplished by Hercules, who diverted the river Alpheus through them.
Augean stables
plural noun
- Greek myth the stables, not cleaned for 30 years, where King Augeas kept 3000 oxen. Hercules diverted the River Alpheus through them and cleaned them in a day
Augean stables
- Stables that figured in the Greek myth of the Labors of Hercules . The stables, which belonged to King Augeas, housed a large herd of cattle and had not been cleaned for years. Hercules was ordered to clean out these filthy stalls. He did so by diverting the course of two rivers so that they flowed through the stables.
Word History and Origins
Origin of Augean stables1
Example Sentences
A moment in Greek mythology comes to mind: Hercules and the Augean Stables.
She made everyone else look overdone and overdressed, washing the Augean stables of Cannes clean.
He likened the Internet to the Augean stables in Greek mythology, which needed Hercules to divert two rivers to wash away decades of manure.
Isn’t the simple fact that the race is this close, when Biden should be crushing Trump, given the president’s lethal negligence and willful subterfuge on the virus and his racial demagogy, proof that our realities are so disparate from one another that unifying will be akin to cleaning a dozen Augean stables?
The fifth labor was to clean the Augean stables in a single day.
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