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Labyrinthine   /lˌæbərˈɪnθˌin/   Listen
Labyrinthine

adjective
1.
Relating to or affecting or originating in the inner ear.
2.
Resembling a labyrinth in form or complexity.  Synonyms: labyrinthian, mazy.



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"Labyrinthine" Quotes from Famous Books



... Labyrinthine, wonderful. From Ddalus, a famous Athenian architect, who designed the labyrinth at Crete in which the Minotaur ...
— Six Centuries of English Poetry - Tennyson to Chaucer • James Baldwin

... and boundless as the woods upon the Himalaya's brow, Nor ever may the struggling floods rush headlong to the earth below. Opening, egress was not there, amid those winding, long meanders. Within that labyrinthine hair, for many an ...
— Nala and Damayanti and Other Poems • Henry Hart Milman

... rights, and their duties, down to such minute carefulness as that they may not smoke on duty "except when engaged in peculiarly dirty and offensive labor," are here, as in all official matters in Germany, outlined in labyrinthine detail. Sickness, death, accident, are all provided for with a pension, and there are also certain gifts of money for long service. The police and the street-cleaning department co-operate to enforce the law, where private companies or the city-owned street-railways ...
— Germany and the Germans - From an American Point of View (1913) • Price Collier

... their obscure and mysterious recesses. They may have ended in the cour des miracles for all we knew—it was nearly fifty years ago—and they may be quite virtuous abodes of poverty to-day; but they seemed to us then strange, labyrinthine abysses of crime and secret dens of infamy, where dreadful deeds were done in the dead of long winter nights. Evidently, to us in those days, whoever should lose himself there would never see daylight again; so we loved to visit them ...
— The Martian • George Du Maurier

... many languages, was no doubt intelligible only in broad outline to the masses, and sometimes, when it percolated through the labyrinthine maze of such minds as that of the worthy Bishop of Mende, it appeared overwrought, full of contradictions, and of double meanings. It seems then as if the symbolist were splitting a hair with embroidery scissors. But, in spite of the extravagance ...
— The Cathedral • Joris-Karl Huysmans


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