English to burmese meaning of

Hercules ဟူသော စကားလုံးသည် Nemean ခြင်္သေ့သတ်ခြင်းနှင့် Augean နွားတင်းကုပ်များ သန့်စင်ခြင်း အပါအဝင် ဘုရင် Eurystheus က သူ့အပေါ် လုပ်အား ၁၂ ကြိမ် လုပ်ဆောင်ခြင်းကြောင့် လူသိများသော ဒဏ္ဍာရီလာ သူရဲကောင်းတစ်ဦးကို ရည်ညွှန်းသည်။ "Hercules" ဟူသောအမည်ကို ခွန်အားကြီးမားသော သို့မဟုတ် သတ္တိရှိသူတစ်ဦး သို့မဟုတ် ပြီးမြောက်အောင်မြင်ရန် ကြီးစွာသောအားထုတ်မှု သို့မဟုတ် ခွန်အားလိုအပ်သည့်အရာများအတွက်လည်း မကြာခဏအသုံးပြုသည်။

Sentence Examples

  1. But the rock was too heavy, and too firmly wedged, to be moved by anyone man, were he Hercules himself.
  2. This same Casildea, then, that I speak of, requited my honourable passion and gentle aspirations by compelling me, as his stepmother did Hercules, to engage in many perils of various sorts, at the end of each promising me that, with the end of the next, the object of my hopes should be attained but my labours have gone on increasing link by link until they are past counting, nor do I know what will be the last one that is to be the beginning of the accomplishment of my chaste desires.
  3. For an instant the power of Porthos seemed about to fail him, but this new Hercules united all his force, and the two walls of the prison in which he was buried fell back slowly and gave him place.
  4. Leaving the Greek myths and nodding to the Romans, the place seemed a shopping mall for Hercules.
  5. The twelve labors of Hercules were trifling in comparison with those which my neighbors have undertaken for they were only twelve, and had an end but I could never see that these men slew or captured any monster or finished any labor.
  6. Of Hercules, him of the many labours, it is said that he was lewd and luxurious.
  7. This low abject brood, That fix their seats in mediocrity, Become your servile minds but we advance Such virtues only as admit excess, Brave, bounteous acts, regal magnificence, All-seeing prudence, magnanimity That knows no bound, and that heroic virtue For which antiquity hath left no name, But patterns only, such as Hercules, Achilles, Theseus.
  8. Now it is an established fact that all or most famous knights-errant have some special gift, one that of being proof against enchantment, another that of being made of such invulnerable flesh that he cannot be wounded, as was the famous Roland, one of the twelve peers of France, of whom it is related that he could not be wounded except in the sole of his left foot, and that it must be with the point of a stout pin and not with any other sort of weapon whatever and so, when Bernardo del Carpio slew him at Roncesvalles, finding that he could not wound him with steel, he lifted him up from the ground in his arms and strangled him, calling to mind seasonably the death which Hercules inflicted on Antæus, the fierce giant that they say was the son of Terra.
  9. He thought more of Bernardo del Carpio because at Roncesvalles he slew Roland in spite of enchantments, availing himself of the artifice of Hercules when he strangled Antæus the son of Terra in his arms.