˜yÐÄvlog

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klepht

[ kleft ]

noun

  1. a Greek or Albanian brigand, exalted in the war of Greek independence as a patriotic robber; guerrilla.


klepht

/ °ì±ôÉ›´Ú³Ù /

noun

  1. any of the Greeks who fled to the mountains after the 15th-century Turkish conquest of Greece and whose descendants survived as brigands into the 19th century
“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
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Derived Forms

  • ˈ°ì±ô±ð±è³ó³Ù¾±³¦, adjective
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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • °ì±ô±ð±è³ót¾±³¦ adjective
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of klepht1

1810–20; < Modern Greek °ì±ôé±è³ó³Ùŧ²õ, variant of Modern Greek, Greek °ì±ôé±è³Ùŧ²õ thief, rogue; kleptomania
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of klepht1

C19: from Modern Greek °ì±ô±ð±è³ó³Ùŧ²õ, from Greek °ì±ô±ð±è³Ùŧ²õ thief
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Klepht, kleft, n. a Greek or Albanian brigand.

From

The dying Klepht bids his companions make him a large and lofty tomb that he may stand therein and load his musket: “Make a window in the side that the swallows may tell me that spring has come, that the nightingales may sing me the approach of flowery May.â€

From

They breathe the aroma of the forests and mountains; like the early rhapsodies of antiquity, which peopled nature with a thousand forms, they lend a voice to the trees, the rocks, the rivers and to the mountains themselves, which sing the prowess of the Klepht, bewail his death and comfort his disconsolate wife or mother.

From

Olympia boasts to Ossa that the footstep of the Turk has never desecrated its valleys; the standard of freedom floats over its springs; there is a Klepht beneath every tree of its forests; an eagle sits on its summit with the head of a warrior in its talons.

From

But the guerilla tactics of the wily klepht were powerless against Ibrahim, who marched northward, and, avoiding Nauplia for the present, seized Tripolitsa, and made this the base from which his columns marched to devastate the country far and wide.

From

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