See also: ATLAS, atlas, and atłas

English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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From Latin Ā̆tlās, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas), either from ἁ- (ha-, copulative prefix) + Proto-Indo-European *telh₂- (bear, undergo, endure) or of Pre-Greek origin.

Proper noun

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Atlas (countable and uncountable, plural Atlases)

  1. (Greek mythology) The son of Iapetus and Clymene, war leader of the Titans ordered by the god Zeus to support the sky on his shoulders; father to the Hesperides, the Hyades, and the Pleiades; king of the legendary Atlantis.
  2. A placename:
    1. A place in the United States:
      1. An unincorporated community in Pike County, Illinois.
      2. A township in Genesee County, Michigan.
      3. An unincorporated community in Lamar County, Texas.
      4. An unincorporated community in Upshur County, West Virginia.
      5. An unincorporated community in Laketown, Polk County, Wisconsin.
    2. (astronomy) A moon of Saturn.
    3. (astronomy) A crater in the last quadrant of the moon.
    4. (astronomy) A triple star system in the Pleiades open cluster (M45) also known as 27 Tauri.
  3. (countable) A surname.
  4. (astronautics, military, US) An SM-65, an early ICBM, soon developed into a long-lived orbital launch vehicle series.
Derived terms
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Translations
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Noun

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Atlas (plural Atlases)

  1. (astronautics, military, US) A particular model or individual specimen of the Atlas missile and launch vehicle line.

Etymology 2

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From French Atlas. From the Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas), stemming from the belief that the mountain range is actually the body of the Titan Atlas after being turned to stone. The Berber languages exist in the region of the Atlas Mountains.

Proper noun

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Atlas (plural Atlases)

  1. A subgroup of the Berber languages.
  2. Ellipsis of Atlas Mountains
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Etymology 3

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Alteration of ATLAS

Proper noun

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Atlas

  1. (astronomy) Alternative form of ATLAS

Anagrams

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Dutch

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Latin Atlas, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈɑt.lɑs/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: At‧las

Proper noun

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Atlas m

  1. (Greek mythology) Atlas (mythological giant)
  2. (uncommon) Atlas Mountains
    Synonym: Atlasgebergte
  3. (astronomy) Atlas (moon of Saturn)

Derived terms

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French

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French Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fr

Etymology

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Learned borrowing from Latin Atlas, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas).

Pronunciation

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Proper noun

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Atlas m

  1. (Greek mythology) Atlas (son of Iapetus and Clymene, leader of the Titans ordered by Zeus to support the sky on his shoulders)
  2. (astronomy) Atlas (moon of Saturn)
  3. (astronomy) Atlas (star in the Pleiades)
  4. (astronomy) Atlas (crater in the first quadrant of the moon)
  5. Atlas Mountains

Derived terms

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German

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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German Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia de

Borrowed from Latin Atlās or from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas), from the name of the mythological figure Ἄτλας (Átlas, Bearer (of the Heavens)).

Noun

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Atlas m (strong, genitive Atlas or Atlasses or Atlanten, plural Atlanten)

  1. (cartography or reference work) atlas (bound collection of maps)
    • 1902, Geologisches Centralblatt, volume 2, page 17:
      In diesem System der Arbeitstheilung, sowie in der ungenügenden topographischen Grundlage 1 : 50 000 liegt auch die Schwäche des Atlasses, der gleichwohl für jene Zeit ein hervorragendes Werk darstellte.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
  2. atlas (bound collection of tables, illustrations on any subject)
    • 2008, Frank H. Netter, translated by Roland Mühlbauer, Atlas der Anatomie, fourth edition, →ISBN, preface:
      Jeder von ihnen hat einen Abschnitt des Atlanten gegengelesen, korrigiert und auf den neuesten Stand gebracht.
      Each one of them checked, corrected, and brought a chapter of the atlas up to date.
  3. (uncommon) atlas (figure of a man used as a column)
    Synonym: Atlant
Declension
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Noun

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Atlas m (strong, genitive Atlas or Atlasses or Atlanten, plural Atlasse)

  1. (medicine) atlas (uppermost vertebra of the neck)
    • 1893, A. Lücke, E. Rose, editors, Deutsche Zeitschrift für Chirurgie, volume 35, page 559:
      Halswirbel zeigt sich an der rechten unteren Gelenkfläche des Atlas eine leicht bogenförmige, usurirte [sic] Linie im Gelenkknorpel: []
      The cervical vertebra manifests on the right anterior articular surface of the atlas a slightly arcuate, abraded line in the articular cartilage: []
Declension
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Proper noun

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der Atlas m (proper noun, strong, usually definite, definite genitive des Atlas or des Atlasses or des Atlanten)

  1. the Atlas Mountains (a mountain range in northwestern Africa)
Declension
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Proper noun

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Atlas m (proper noun, strong, genitive Atlas' or (with an article) Atlas)

  1. (astronomy) Atlas (moon of Saturn)
  2. (astronomy) Atlas (star in the Pleiades)
  3. (astronomy) Atlas (crater in the first quadrant of the moon)
Declension
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Proper noun

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Atlas m (proper noun, strong, genitive Atlas', plural Atlasse)

  1. (Greek mythology) Atlas (son of Iapetus and Clymene, leader of the Titans ordered by Zeus to support the sky on his shoulders)
  2. an unknown-gender given name
Declension
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Proper noun

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Atlas m or f (proper noun, surname, masculine genitive Atlas' or (with an article) Atlas, feminine genitive Atlas, plural Atlas or Atlasens)

  1. a surname
Declension
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Proper noun

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die Atlas f (proper noun, usually definite, definite genitive der Atlas)

  1. Atlas (family of US intercontinental ballistic missiles)
Declension
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Etymology 2

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German Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia de

Borrowed from Arabic أَطْلَس (ʔaṭlas).

Noun

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Atlas m (strong, genitive Atlas or Atlasses, no plural)

  1. atlas satin
Declension
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Derived terms
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Further reading

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  • Atlas”, in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache[1] (in German)

Latin

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Etymology

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    From the name of the Ancient Greek mythological figure Ἄτλας (Átlas, Bearer (of the Heavens)).

    Pronunciation

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    Proper noun

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    Ā̆tlās m (genitive Ā̆tlantis); third declension

    1. a mountain in the Atlas Mountain Range in the former Kingdom of Mauretania, said to support the heavens
      • 29 BCE – 19 BCE, Vergilius, Aeneis 4.246–251:
        [...] iamque volāns apicem et latera ardua cernit / Ātlantis dūrī, caelum quī vertice fulcit; / Ātlantis, cīnctum adsiduē cui nūbibus ātrīs / pīniferum caput et ventō pulsātur et imbrī, / nix umerōs īnfūsa tegit; tum flūmina mentō / praecipitant senis, et glaciē riget horrida barba.
        [...] And now as he flies, [Mercury] sees the peak and steep sides of Atlas the enduring, whose top props up the sky; of Atlas, whose pine-clad head is ever girt with dark clouds, and battered by wind and rain, [and] his shoulders laden with fallen snow; [then,] further on, rivers pour down his aged chin, and his bristly beard is stiff with ice.
        (This personification blends aspects of both the Titan and the mountain; see also: epanalepsis.)
    2. (Greek mythology) the Titan Atlas
      • Ovid Metamorphoses with an English translation by Frank Justus Miller. In two volumes, I, books I–VIII, 1951, page 224–225 containing Ovidus' Metamorphoses IV, 644–645:
        "tempus, Atla, veniet, tua quo spoliabitur auro
        arbor, et hunc praedae titulum Iove natus habebit."
        "Atlas, the time will come when your tree will be spoiled of its gold, and he who gets the glory of this spoil will be Jove's son."

    Declension

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    Third-declension noun.

    singular plural
    nominative Ā̆tlās Ā̆tlantēs
    genitive Ā̆tlantis Ā̆tlantum
    dative Ā̆tlantī Ā̆tlantibus
    accusative Ā̆tlantem Ā̆tlantēs
    ablative Ā̆tlante Ā̆tlantibus
    vocative Ā̆tlā Ā̆tlantēs

    Derived terms

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    Descendants

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    • Portuguese: Atlas
    • Spanish: Atlas

    References

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    • Ā̆tlās”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
    • Atlas”, in Gaffiot, Félix (1934), Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.

    Polish

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    Polish Wikipedia has an article on:
    Wikipedia pl

    Etymology

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      Learned borrowing from Latin Ā̆tlās.

      Pronunciation

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      Proper noun

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      Atlas m pers

      1. (Greek mythology) Atlas (titan who holds the sky)

      Declension

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      Further reading

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      • Atlas”, in Polish dictionaries at PWN[2] (in Polish)
      • Atlas in PWN's encyclopedia

      Portuguese

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      Portuguese Wikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipedia pt
       
      Atlas

      Etymology

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      Borrowed from Latin Atlas, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas, literally The Bearer (of the Heavens)), from (Á, copulative prefix) + τλῆναι (tlênai, to suffer, to endure, to bear), from Proto-Indo-European *telh₂- (to support, lift, weigh).

      Pronunciation

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      Proper noun

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      Atlas m

      1. (Greek mythology) Atlas (titan who holds the sky)

      Proper noun

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      Atlas f

      1. (astronomy) Atlas (a moon of Saturn)

      Proper noun

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      Atlas m pl (plural only)

      1. Atlas Mountains (a mountain range in northwestern Africa)

      Derived terms

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      Spanish

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      Spanish Wikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipedia es

      Etymology

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        Borrowed from Latin Atlās, from Ancient Greek Ἄτλας (Átlas).

        Pronunciation

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        • IPA(key): /ˈatlas/ [ˈa.t̪las]
        • Rhymes: -atlas
        • Syllabification: A‧tlas

        Proper noun

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        Atlas m

        1. (Greek mythology) Atlas (titan who holds the sky)

        Derived terms

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        Proper noun

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        Atlas m pl (plural only)

        1. Atlas Mountains (a mountain range in northwestern Africa, occupying portions of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia)

        Turkish

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        Turkish Wikipedia has an article on:
        Wikipedia tr

        Proper noun

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        Atlas

        1. (Greek mythology) Atlas