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labyrinth
(redirected from Labrynth)

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.
labyrinth (lăb`ərĭnth), intricate building of chambers and passages, often constructed so as to perplex and confuse a person inside. In Egypt, Amenemhet III of the XII dynasty built himself a funeral temple in the form of a great labyrinth near Lake Moeris. More celebrated was a labyrinth in Crete built, according to Greek myth, by Daedalus Daedalus (dĕd`ələs), in Greek mythology, craftsman and inventor.
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 to house the Minotaur (see Minos Minos (mī`nŏs, –nəs), in Greek mythology, king of Crete, son of Zeus and Europa .
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).

labyrinth

 or maze

System of intricate passageways and blind alleys. Labyrinth was the name given by the ancient Greeks and Romans to buildings, entirely or partly underground, containing a number of chambers and passages that made egress difficult. From the European Renaissance on, labyrinths or mazes consisting of intricate paths separated by high hedges were a feature of formal gardens.


labyrinth
1. 
a. any system of interconnecting cavities, esp those comprising the internal ear
b. another name for internal ear
2. Electronics an enclosure behind a high-performance loudspeaker, consisting of a series of air chambers designed to absorb unwanted sound waves

Labyrinth
maze at Knossos where Minotaur lived. [Gk. Myth.: Hall, 185]
See : Confusion


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A heat channel labrynth arrangement within the rotor body maximizes the heat transfer capability of this unique rotor design.
The daily New York Times these days feels like a labrynth itself.
A labrynth sealing arrangement beneath the rotor is said to prevent surplus rubber contaminating the bearings.
 
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