See also: sea monster and seamonster

English edit

Noun edit

sea-monster (plural sea-monsters)

  1. Alternative form of sea monster.
    • 1916, W[illiam] R[oger] Paton, transl., The Greek Anthology (The Loeb Classical Library), volume I, London: William Heinemann; New York, N.Y.: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, page 319:
      To thee Poseidon, Lord of the sea, did Amyntichus give these his last gifts, when he ceased from his toil on the deep—his nets edged with lead that plunge into the sea, his oar still drunk with the brine, his spear for killing sea-monsters, strong lance of the waters, his weel ever betrayed by floats, his anchor, firm hand of his boat, and the flint, dear to sailors, that has the art of guarding the seed of fire.
    • 1991, Frederick Rebsamen, transl., Beowulf: A Verse Translation, New York, N.Y.: IconEditions, HarperCollins Publishers, →ISBN, page 18, lines 539–541:
      With naked swords we slashed through the waves / ready with warblades for wandering whales / dark sea-monsters.
    • 2016, J.G. Farrow, Introduction to Mythology, 3rd edition, Dubuque, Ia.: Kendall Hunt Publishing Company, published 2017, →ISBN, page 131:
      There are many references in antiquity to this story of an earlier Trojan War, in which Hercules, after killing a sea-monster and rescuing the princess Hesione, requested the princess as a bride in reward for his work.