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If you are talking Greek myth, you do not kill them, they kill you!

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15y ago

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What creature can kill a maenad?

Anyone can. They are human.


Can a maenad die?

a maenad has a statue with them that is supernatually attached to their being and if you smash that they go buhbyez so if you ever feel the need to kill one there you go


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Literally meaning to rave one of the mythical Greek female followers of Dionysos?

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How do you use Maenad in a sentence?

Maenad is a noun. A maenad was a female follower of Dionysus, one which was granted several special powers by the god for their following, despite the fact that they were not always necessarily willing followers. They were often depicted wearing a fawnskin and carrying a Thyrsus in their right hand, the Thyrsus being akin to an enormous wand that could do things such as make wine spout from the earth where it struck (on account of Dionysus being the God of Wine). They were also often naked, and always in a sort of divine trance that would appear to any normal person as some sort of insanity. They demonstrated incredible feats of strength while in this "insanity", such as ripping both beast and human alike apart with their bare hands, for raw consumption and as sacrifice to their god. During such instances, their hands were often described as "sharp" or "clawed" or "taloned", though it's not entirely clear whether this indicated that they actually had some sort of divine transformation going on or whether it just referred to this unnatural strength, that they could rip apart a living creature with bare hands as easily as a clawed/taloned creature. So, you would use it for instance by saying "She was a maenad" or "the maenads descended upon the beast, ripping it apart within moments". I'm unsure whether maenad is supposed to be capitalized or not though, as it is somewhat of a title. I found your question in search of an answer to my own on capitalization. Additionally, you can use the stem in other forms, by saying something such as "They performed their maenadic rites", in which case it would be an adverb, though I can't think of a way to form it in a proper way to make it take the place of an adjective (this may be possible, but I'm having difficulty coming up with one) or as a verb (don't believe this would ever be correct).


Why is the hair of fierce Maenad used in the poem Ode to the West Wind?

Shelley in the poem Ode To The West Wind is describing a tumultuous scene in the stormy sky. Loose clouds are fleeing across the darkening sky driven by the force of the west wind. Angels of rain and lightning are flying everywhere. It is from this deep commotion that black rain and fire and hail has to burst out later. Poets have intenser emotions and imaginations than other human beings. If the lightnings spread there across that blue airy surge is a bright hair uplifted from the head of some fierce being, how big would be that head ? And how huge and horrid would be that body that produced such long, heavy, hoary and dazzling a hair as a lightning? A typical style of imagination of an unusually imaginative child! But poets are no older than children. A typical American child would think first of the Statue Of Liberty. A British will normally think about the Rhodes islands. And Shelley thought about Maenad, the exhilarated woman attendant of Bacchus, the Greek god of wine, as such long a hair as the lightning could have come only from a woman. He may have seen the sculpture of Maenad in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy, when he visited there or might have heard about it from someone.


What country celebrates lenaia?

The Lenaia was an annual Athenian festival celebrated in ancient Greece.The Lenaia took place in Athens in the month roughly corresponding to January. The festival was in honour of Dionysus. "Lenaia" probably comes from "lenai", which is another name for the Maenad (the female worshippers of Dionysos).


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Kill....kill.....kill....KILL!