P. 119.—“Ægaleos,” æ-gaˈle-os.
P. 120.—“Psyttalea,” psytˈta-leˌa.
“Munychia,” mu-nychˈi-a. Artemis, or Diana, had a temple on a hill called Munychia, in the peninsula of Piræus.
P. 122.—“Ecclesia,” ec-clēˈsi-a. The public legislative assembly of the Athenians.
“Dicastery,” dī-castˈe-ry. The assembly of the jurymen: a court of justice.
P. 125.—“Timocreon,” ti-moˈcre-on. A lyric poet of Rhodes.
P. 127.—“Eion,” e-iˈon; “Strymon,” stryˈmon.
“Cyclades,” cycˈla-des. A group of islands in the Ægean Sea. So called because they lay in a circle around Delos, the most important of them.
P. 130.—“Mounychia,” written, also, Munychia. One of the three harbors of the Piræus.
“Sounion,” souˈni-on, also written Sunium. The promontory at the southern extremity of Attica.