noun
an undistinguished imitator, follower, or successor of an important writer, painter, etc.
The English noun epigone ultimately comes from the Greek plural noun 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗勳 offspring, posterity, literally (ones) born after or later, a noun use of the adjective 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗莽 born besides. The original, primary use of 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗勳 was for the sons of the seven heroes who fought against Seven-Gated Thebes, traditionally a generation before the Trojan War. The secondary use of 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗勳 was for the heirs of the 餃勳獺餃棗釵堯棗勳 successors, i.e., Alexander the Greats (356-323 b.c.) generals (e.g., Ptolemy, Seleucus) who divided Alexanders conquests among themselves. The 餃勳獺餃棗釵堯棗勳 were very competent and their offspring far inferior, which is the modern meaning of epigone. Epigone entered English in the 19th century.
… is there anything lower than stealing from an epigone?
The palace was partly designed by a famous architect of the time, L籀pez i Porta, one of Gaudi’s epigones, and partly by Benvingut himself, which explains the labyrinthine, chaotic, indecisive layout of every storey in the building.
adjective
resembling or suggestive of a lion.
The English adjective leonine comes from Latin 梭梗紳蘋紳喝莽, a derivative of the noun 梭梗 (inflectional stem 梭梗n-), a borrowing from Greek 梭矇紳 (inflectional stem 梭矇棗紳喧-). 郭矇紳 is not a Greek word, but it does look somewhat like Hebrew 梭櫻莉堯蘋; both the Greek and the Hebrew nouns may be borrowings from a third language. The Greek historian Herodotus (484?-425? b.c.) and the philosopher Aristotle (384-322 b.c.) both assert that lions were rare in Europe in their day but were still found. Leonine entered English in the 14th century.
Only a few discerned the inexorable firmness in the depth of his soul, and the magnanimous and leonine qualities of his nature.
George Clooney was at home in Los Angeles one afternoon in mid-January, a few days before he flew to Sudan in his new role as a United Nations Messenger of Peace (an appointment that overlooked reports of a recent public scuffle with Fabio, the leonine model).
The adjective vogie is Scottish through and through, and all the citations of the word come from Scottish authors. Vogie has no good etymology: it is tempting to etymologize the word as vogue plus the suffix -ie, but the meanings of vogue and vogie do not match. Vogie entered English in the 18th century.
… a most comical character, so vogie of his honours and dignities in the town council that he could not get the knight told often enough what a load aboon the burden he had in keeping a’ things douce and in right regulation amang the bailies.
My only beast, I had nae mae, / And vow but I was vogie!