Nyseus

Etymology
Borrowed from ; related to and 🇨🇬.

Proper noun
telasque calathosque infectaque pensa reponunt turaque dant Bacchumque vocant Bromiumque Lyaeumque ignigenamque satumque iterum solumque bimatrem ; additur his Nyseus indetonsusque Thyoneus et cum Lenaeo genialis consitor uvae Nycteliusque Eleleusque parens et Iacchus et Euhan, et quae praeterea per Graias plurima gentes nomina, Liber, babes.
 * 1) * Publius Ovidius Naso, metamorphoses, liber IV. In: Ovid Metamorphoses with an English translation by Frank Justus Miller. In two Volumes I Books I–VIII, 1951, p. 178f.:
 * parent matresque nurusque
 * parent matresque nurusque
 * The matrons and young wives all obey, put by weaving and work-baskets, leave their tasks unfinished ; they burn incense, calling on Bacchus, naming him also Bromius,1 Lyaeus,2 son of the thunderbolt, twice born, child of two mothers ; they hail him as Nyseus3 also, Thyoneus4 of the unshorn locks, Lenaeus,5 planter of the joy-giving vine, Nyctelius,6 father Eleleus,7 Iacchus,8 and Euhan, and all the many names besides by which thou art known, O Liber,9 throughout the towns of Greece.
 * 1 " The noisy one."
 * 2 " The deliverer from care."
 * 3 " Of Nysa," a city in India, connected traditionally with the infancy of Bacchus.
 * 4 " Son of Thyone," the name given to his mother, Semele, after her translation to the skies.
 * 5 "God of the wine-press."
 * 6 So named from the fact that his orgies were celebrated in the night.
 * 7 From the wild cries uttered by his worshippers in the orgies.
 * 8 A name identified with Bacchus.
 * 9 Either from liber, " the free," or from libo, " he to whom libations of wine are poured."