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Pyrrhic (adj.)

1885 (usually in phrase Pyrrhic victory), from Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, who defeated Roman armies at Asculum, 280 B.C.E., but at such cost to his own troops that he was unable to follow up and attack Rome itself, and is said to have remarked, "one more such victory and we are lost."

pyrrhic (n.)

"dance in armor" (1590s), also a type of metrical foot (1620s), from Latin pyrrhicha, from Greek pyrrikhe orkhesis, the war-dance of ancient Greece, traditionally named for its inventor, Pyrrikhos. The name means "reddish," from pyrros "flame-colored," from pyr "fire," from PIE root *paewr- "fire." As an adjective from 1749.

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Definitions of Pyrrhic from WordNet
1
pyrrhic (adj.)
of or relating to a war dance of ancient Greece;
pyrrhic dance movements
pyrrhic (adj.)
of or relating to or containing a metrical foot of two unstressed syllables;
pyrrhic verses
pyrrhic (adj.)
of or relating to or resembling Pyrrhus or his exploits (especially his sustaining staggering losses in order to defeat the Romans);
2
pyrrhic (n.)
a metrical unit with unstressed-unstressed syllables;
Synonyms: dibrach
pyrrhic (n.)
an ancient Greek dance imitating the motions of warfare;
From wordnet.princeton.edu