γλαῦκ' εἰς Ἀθήνας

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • γλαῦκ’ Ἀθήναζε (glaûk’ Athḗnaze)

Etymology

The owl, which roosted in the rafters of the old Parthenon (the one burnt by Xerxes I), was the symbol of the city of Athens, and was sacred to its patron goddess, Athena. It was featured on Athens’ silver coins, and as Athens both mined its own silver and minted its own coins, bringing owls (either the real birds, or the coins) to Athens would be pointless.

Compare English coals to Newcastle.

Pronunciation

 

Phrase

γλαῦκ’ εἰς Ᾰ̓θήνᾱς (glaûk’ eis Athḗnās)

  1. Undertaking a pointless, redundant, unnecessary, superfluous, or highly uneconomical venture.

Usage notes

Descendants

References

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