eleventh
From LSJ
ἀλώπηξ, αἰετοῦ ἅ τ' ἀναπιτναμένα ῥόμβον ἴσχει → a fox, which, by spreading itself out, wards off the eagle's swoop
English > Greek (Woodhouse)
adjective
or she shall learn even at the eleventh hour that 'tis labour lost to honour what is dead: ἢ γνώσεται γοῦν ἀλλὰ τηνικαῦθ' ὅτι πόνος περισσός ἐστι τἀν ᾍδου σέβειν (Soph., Antigone 779).