Iphedeiah
set free by Jehovah, a chief of the tribe of Benjamin (1 Chr. 8:25).
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- Iphianassa
[if-ee-uh-nas-uh] /ˌɪf i əˈnæs ə/ noun 1. (in the Iliad) a daughter of Agamemnon, offered to Achilles as a wife if he would return to battle against the Trojans. 2. a daughter of Proetus and Antia who, with her sisters Iphinoë and Lysippe, was inflicted with madness for her irreverence toward the gods.
- Iphicles
[if-i-kleez, ahy-fi-] /ˈɪf ɪˌkliz, ˈaɪ fɪ-/ noun, Classical Mythology. 1. a son of Alcmene and Amphitryon, the brother of Hercules.
- Iphigenia
[if-i-juh-nahy-uh, -nee-uh] /ˌɪf ɪ dʒəˈnaɪ ə, -ˈni ə/ noun 1. Classical Mythology. the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra and sister of Orestes and Electra: when she was about to be sacrificed to ensure a wind to take the Greek ships to Troy, she was saved by Artemis, whose priestess she became. 2. a female given […]
- Iphigenia-in-aulis
[aw-lis] /ˈɔ lɪs/ noun 1. a tragedy (408? b.c.) by Euripides. 2. an opera (1774) by Christoph Willibald von Gluck.
- Iphigenia-in-tauris
[tawr-is] /ˈtɔr ɪs/ noun 1. a drama (413? b.c.) by Euripides. 2. an opera (1779) by Christoph Willibald von Gluck.