noun
- a long narrative poem in a dignified style about the deeds of a traditional or historical hero or heroes; typically,
- a poem like the Iliad or the Odyssey, with certain formal characteristics (beginning in medias res, catalog passages, invocations of the muse, etc.)
- a poem like Milton's Paradise Lost, in which such characteristics are applied to later or different materials
- a poem like Beowulf, considered as expressing the early ideals and traditions of a people or nation
- any long narrative poem regarded as having the style, structure, and importance of an epic, as Dante's Divine Comedy
- a prose narrative, play, film, etc. regarded as having the qualities of an epic
- a series of events regarded as a proper subject for an epic
Origin:
L epicus < Gr epikos, (adj.) epic < epos, a word, speech, song, epic < IE *wekwos-, word < base *wekw-, to speak > L vox, OE woma, noise