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Icarus

[ ik-er-uhs, ahy-ker- ]

noun

  1. Also ··Dz []. Classical Mythology. a youth who attempted to escape from Crete with wings of wax and feathers but flew so high that his wings melted from the heat of the sun, and he plunged to his death in the sea.
  2. Astronomy. an asteroid whose eccentric orbit brings it closer to the sun than any other known asteroid.


Icarus

/ ˈaɪ-; ˈɪkərəs /

noun

  1. Greek myth the son of Daedalus, with whom he escaped from Crete, flying with wings made of wax and feathers. Heedless of his father's warning he flew too near the sun, causing the wax to melt, and fell into the Aegean and drowned
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Icarus

/ ĭə-ə /

  1. A small asteroid with a highly eccentric, Earth-crossing orbit that takes it to within 30 million km (19 million mi) of the Sun, or closer than the planet Mercury. In 1968 Icarus approached within 6 million km (4 million mi) of the Earth.
  2. See more at asteroid

Icarus

  1. In classical mythology , the son of Daedalus . Icarus died tragically while using artificial wings, invented by his father, to escape from the Labyrinth . When Icarus flew too close to the sun , it melted the wax that held the wings together, and he fell into the sea.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Still, with Trump’s track record for leaving bodies in his wake, the higher Musk flies the more he risks being Icarus – not Trump.

From

Some of the details feel marvelously resonant, especially how the off-the-clock Shelly never can scrub off every speck of glitter, or the way she keeps ripping her costume wings like some cabaret Icarus.

From

What few readers saw at the time is that this is an Icarus story.

From

It was long thought that high-speed collisions pulverized the comet ejecta, but now a 45-member team of researchers reports, in a paper published online in the journal Icarus this week, that heat is to blame.

From

The results were published in the journal Icarus.

From

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