Metrodorus () is a Greek masculine given name. Notable persons with the name include: Metrodorus of Lampsacus (the elder) (5th century BC), philosopher from the school of Anaxagoras Metrodorus of Cos (5th century BC), Pythagorean writer Metrodorus of Chios (4th century BC), philosopher from the school of Democritus Metrodorus of Lampsacus (the younger) (331–278 BC), Epicurean philosopher Metrodorus of Athens (mid 2nd century BC), philosopher and painter Metrodorus of Stratonicea (late 2nd century BC), philosopher, originally Epicurean, later a follower of Carneades Metrodorus of Scepsis
Metrodorus () is a Greek masculine given name. Notable persons with the name include: Metrodorus of Lampsacus (the elder) (5th century BC), philosopher from the school of Anaxagoras Metrodorus of Cos (5th century BC), Pythagorean writer Metrodorus of Chios (4th century BC), philosopher from the school of Democritus Metrodorus of Lampsacus (the younger) (331–278 BC), Epicurean philosopher Metrodorus of Athens (mid 2nd century BC), philosopher and painter Metrodorus of Stratonicea (late 2nd century BC), philosopher, originally Epicurean, later a follower of Carneades Metrodorus of Scepsis (c. 145 BC – 70 BC), writer, orator and politician Metrodorus (grammarian) (c. 6th century AD), grammarian and mathematician who collected the mathematical epigrams in the Greek Anthology Metrodorus (4th century BC), physician who married Aristotle's daughter Pythias Metrodorus (late 3rd, early 2nd century BC), general in the employ of Philip V of Macedon during the Cretan War
==Fictional characters== Mitrodor (Russified form), fictional character in Nikolai Nekrasov's poem Who Can Be Happy and Free in Russia?
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).