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Lucan
[ loo-kuhn ]
noun
- Marcus Annaeus Lucanus, a.d. 39–65, Roman poet, born in Spain.
Lucan
1/ ˈːə /
noun
- Lucan3965MRomanWRITING: poet Latin name Marcus Annaeus Lucanus. 39–65 ad , Roman poet. His epic poem Pharsalia describes the civil war between Caesar and Pompey
Lucan
2/ ˈːə /
adjective
- of or relating to St Luke or St Luke's gospel
Example Sentences
As a teenager, living in Lucan, Dublin, he quit his job as an apprentice plumber to pursue a career in a sport that was relatively unknown in Ireland.
In a new book-length examination of every authoritarian government in the past century, the scholars Steven Levitsky and Lucan Way arrived at one major factor: how that government came to power in the first place.
Lucan Way, whose books include “Pluralism by Default: Weak Autocrats and the Rise of Competitive Politics,” tells The Associated Press that “in principle the clear and unambiguous defeat of anti-democratic actors” such as McCarthy might have a positive effect.
"The man was taken to Lucan Garda Station where he was later charged. He has been released pending an appearance before Blanchardstown District Court at a later date," a police spokesperson told the Irish Independent.
“To find a sighting of the manager scolding a Manchester United player is akin to a search for Lord Lucan: it could take some time.”
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