All 11 Uses
immortal
in
The Blood of Olympus
(Auto-generated)
- Your father could have made me immortal.†
p. 34.1 *
- A super-hot immortal girl was waiting for him on Ogygia, but he couldn't figure out how to wire a stupid chunk of rock into the three-thousand-year-old navigation device.†
p. 88.2
- Still, Hazel Levesque impressed him—even when she wasn't sitting atop a scary immortal supersonic horse who cussed like a sailor.†
p. 103.6
- Besides, I'm an immortal goddess.†
p. 127.3
- What you did last year on Olympus, turning down immortality and asking the gods to play nice instead—that was noble, man.†
p. 275.8immortality = eternal life (to live forever)
- Reyna shook her head in disbelief "That's the Pegasus, the immortal lord of horses."†
p. 305.9
- Even now, after flying halfway up the East Coast together, Reyna could scarcely believe the immortal horse had allowed her to ride.†
p. 354.7
- He's immortal, but his offspring aren't.†
p. 355.2
- You are so weary, so incomprehensibly tired of the ungrateful mortals and immortals.†
p. 464.5immortals = people who live forever OR people famous throughout history
- An immortal could never die, but now Gaea would be like her husband, Ouranos.†
p. 472.1
- "So once you leave Ogygia," he said, "do you stay immortal or what?"†
p. 501.8
Definitions:
-
(1)
(immortal) living or existing forever
or:
someone famous throughout history
or:
someone who will never die -- such as a mythological god -
(2)
(meaning too rare to warrant focus) More rarely, "The Immortals" denotes a military corps of the Persian Empire. The Immortals were so-named because each time a member of the 10,000 man corps was killed or seriously wounded, he was replaced by another man. They are best remembered in western culture for their role in defeating the badly out-numbered Spartans at the Battle of Thermopylae.