mythology
noun /mɪˈθɒlədʒi/
  /mɪˈθɑːlədʒi/
 (plural mythologies)
 [uncountable, countable]- ancient myths in general; the ancient myths of a particular culture, society, etc.
- Narcissus was a character from Greek mythology.
 - She has created her own mythology in the books.
 - a study of the religions and mythologies of ancient Rome
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- popular
 - personal
 - national
 - …
 
- enter
 - create
 
- surround somebody/something
 
- in (a/the) mythology
 - mythology about
 - mythology of
 - …
 
 - ideas that many people think are true but that do not exist or are false
- the popular mythology that life begins at forty
 
Extra Examples- the mythology that surrounds the princess
 - the national mythology of marriage and family
 - Stories about ghosts in the cathedral have entered the mythology of the town.
 - a mythology about how to get fit
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- popular
 - personal
 - national
 - …
 
- enter
 - create
 
- surround somebody/something
 
- in (a/the) mythology
 - mythology about
 - mythology of
 - …
 
 
Word Originlate Middle English: from French mythologie, or via late Latin from Greek muthologia, from muthos ‘myth’ + -logia (see -ology).