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Metapontum

American  
[met-uh-pon-tuhm] / ˌmɛt əˈpɒn təm /

noun

  1. an ancient Greek city in SE Italy, on the Gulf of Taranto: home of Pythagoras in exile.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Hippasus of Metapontum stood on the deck, preparing to die.

From Literature

This someone was Hippasus of Metapontum, a mathematician and member of the Pythagorean brotherhood.

From Literature

There wasn’t a soul here besides us, no tourists with cameras, no yammering tour guides, just a few lizards skittering about, so it was easy to imagine what it would have been like here in the eighth century B.C. when the city of Metapontum rose up on the edge of the Ionian Sea, part of the Magna Graecia colony.

From New York Times

To Achaea belonged the south Italian towns of Croton, Metapontum and Sybaris.

From Project Gutenberg

Transcribers notes On page 30 Megapontum has been left as printed, though the author probably meant Metapontum.

From Project Gutenberg