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[ US /məˈθɑɫəˌdʒi/ ]
[ UK /mɪθˈɒləd‍ʒi/ ]
NOUN
  1. myths collectively; the body of stories associated with a culture or institution or person
  2. the study of myths

How To Use mythology In A Sentence

  • Indeed, in 2002 it seemed that a firm grounding in popular mythology and local fauna was at least as important as a basic grasp of engineering in the designprocess. South Africa races ahead in battle of weirdest World Cup stadiums
  • Obviously, then, the average romance reader is not the undereducated, uninformed, subnormal, frustrated housewife of recent mythology.
  • Again, he pours scorn on racialist mythology but, in his steadfastly conservative way, refuses to become histrionically sanctimonious on the matter, preferring studied contempt to self-promoting outrage.
  • Stories about ghosts in the cathedral have entered the mythology of the town.
  • At first, my goal had been to write out a precise 'demonology' of television using elements from Greek mythology as a teaching tool for my Media Violence class that could be developed into a workbook of sorts. Vamsee Juluri: Writing Mythology in an Age of Reality Crisis
  • The nine Muses called Pierides in Grecian Mythology were the daughters of Jupiter and Mnemosyne (Memory), supposed to preside over the liberal A History of Pantomime
  • Davies, wishing to give dignity to his Celtic mythology, determines to find the arkite idolatry there too, and the style in which he proceeds to do this affords a good specimen of the extravagance which has caused Celtic antiquity to be looked upon with so much suspicion. Celtic Literature
  • The story of the evil king is embedded in our national mythology. Times, Sunday Times
  • Eliade likewise noted that shamans managed to “interiorise” a particular cultural mythology or cosmology before having their mystical experiences. Questions Of Faith
  • The sign is carried by many Egyptian deities in their mythology. Christianity Today
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