English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek Ὑπερίων (Huperíōn).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /haɪˈpɪəɹi.ən/
- Rhymes: -ɪəɹiən
Proper noun
Hyperion
- (Greek mythology) A Titan, the son of Gaia and Uranus and the father of Helios, Selene and Eos.
- (Greek mythology) Helios himself, the incarnation of light and beauty.
- (astronomy) One of the moons of Saturn.
Derived terms
Translations
a Titan, the son of Gaia and Uranus
- Afrikaans: Huperion
- Armenian: Հիպերիոն (hy) (Hiperion)
- Azerbaijani: Hiperion
- Bengali: হুপেরিয়ন (huperiẏon)
- Bulgarian: Хиперион m (Hiperion)
- Catalan: Hiperíon m
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 海柏利昂 (hoi2 paak3 lei6 ngong4)
- Mandarin: 許珀里翁 / 许珀里翁 (Xǔpòlǐwēng), 海柏利昂 (Hǎibólì'áng), 海伯利安 (Hǎibólì'ān)
- Danish: Hyperion
- Finnish: Hyperion
- French: Hypérion (fr) m
- Greek: Υπερίων (el) m (Yperíon)
- Greenlandic: Hyperioni
- Hungarian: Hüperión (hu)
- Inuktitut: ᐦᐃᐲᕆᐅᓐ (hipiirion)
- Italian: Iperione m
- Japanese: ヒュペリーオーン (Hyuperīōn)
- Korean: 히페리온 (Hiperion)
- Persian: هیپریون
- Portuguese: Hipérion m
- Russian: Гиперио́н m (Giperión)
- Spanish: Hiperión m
- Swedish: Hyperion (sv)
- Thai: ไฮพีเรียน
|
moon
- Bulgarian: Хиперион m (Hiperion)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 土衛七 / 土卫七 (Tǔwèiqī)
- Finnish: Hyperion
- Hungarian: Hüperión (hu)
- Italian: Iperione m
- Japanese: ヒペリオン (ja) (Hiperion)
- Korean: 히페리온 (Hiperion)
- Portuguese: Hipérion m
- Russian: Гиперио́н m (Giperión)
- Spanish: Hiperión m
|
Portuguese
Proper noun
Hyperion m
- Pre-reform spelling (used until 1943 in Brazil and 1911 in Portugal) of Hipérion.