"Tycoon" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A very wealthy and powerful business person.
Tyburn is a surname of Norman-French origin. In medieval times, it referred to a place where public executions were carried out. The most well-known usage of the term is in connection with Tyburn Road in Westminster, London, where the Tyburn Tree, a triple gallows, stood from the 17th to the 18th century. The term can also refer to a family, with the notable Tyburn family including several artists and politicians.
Tyche refers to the goddess of chance, fortune, or fate in ancient Greek mythology. The concept is often translated as "luck" or having a favorable or unfavorable destiny. It emphasizes the unpredictable nature of life events, suggesting that our lives are influenced by the whims of fate.
Tychicus (Greek: Τυχικός) is a biblical figure mentioned in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. He was a Christian shown as a colleague of Paul the Apostle who provided Paul a letter to take to the church in Colossae, which Paul wrote to the Colossians. He is referred to in several other letters written by Paul, namely 2 Timothy and Ephesians (Philemon, 1:1 and 2 Timothy 4:12), and Philemon.