APOH — ATTAfAI 



?n 



AITEPIAI {contimted). 



AllSt. H. A. IX. 1, 609b, 18,617 '^^'^ epoiSicov •yeVoy, (TTiKnXnvfJUvos OKvm 

 livdoXoye'LTcu y(Vf(T6ai in bovKwv. Ael. H. A. V. 36 oVo/xcJ eVrtj/ oppidos 

 aa-repias, Ka\ TiQaa-evernl ye iv rrj Alyvnra, Kai updpa)nov (poov?]s fKdifi. 

 el 8e Tis avrhv ovubl^oiv doiiXov eiTvot, o 8e opyi^fTta' Kal e'lris okvov KoXfo-fiev 

 nvTOU, 6 de j^pepdveTiu Kui uyavaKTel, cos Kat (S to dytvues aKcoTTTufiepoi Kai 

 €S (ipylav evdvpafievos. Vide S. V. epcuSios. 



'AZTH'P. a name for the Goldfinch, vide s. v. dKa»'0uXXis. 



Dion. De Avib. iii. 2 darepes ols fpvdpos re kvkXos e'crriV, uxrnep d<TTi]p, 

 eVl Tuls KfcfyaXals. Arrives in spring with the North wind, and is 

 caught with bird-Hme. 



'AZTPArAAfNOZ. An unknown small bird, mentioned along wilh the 

 foregoing, wilh epithet raxvi. Perhaps a synonym of darrip : 

 Belon (cit. Bikdlas) has It. s/raga/tno = Go\d{inch, but, according 

 to Giglioli, the word is not known in any modern Italian dialect. 



'AZTPAAO'Z' 6 yj/apos, vno OeTraXaiv, Hesych. Supposed to be 

 akin to L. s/ur-nu-s (Curt.), h.paru-s (Fick), O. H. G. s/)rd, &c. 



'AZ<I>AA0'Z. An unknown bird ; Hesych. s. v. ivBvaKos. 



'ATTAPA'Z, s. diTaYciS, s. a.rTa,yr\v. Also drTaPuyds, Hesych. (MSS. 

 have dTTayiis, d-rraYiS, drayr]), and rayTii'dpioi', Suid. Cf. Lob. Path. 

 i. p. 142. Athen. 388 B notes the accent as an exception, and the 

 plural aTTaym, not aTTayi]V€s ; cf. Eustath. p. 854 to naXcnou 'ArTayal 

 fj.ev 'AzTiKios, ' ATTuyrjves 6e koivcos. Mod. Gk. Tayivdpi (Du Cange), drTu- 

 yivapi (Sibthorpe ap. Walpole, Mem. rel. to Turkey, p. 262), Xi^a8o- 

 iTep8i$ (Tournefort). Vide s. v. rayiii'. The word has been taken for an 

 Egyptian one, from the phrase 'Arra-yas Alyvn-Tuis, Clem. Alex. Paed. 

 ii. I. p. 140 ; cf. Sturzius De Dial. Aeg. p. 86, ap. Steph. Thes. p. clxxiii. 



The Francolin, Tetrao francoliniis, L. See Lilford, Ibis, 1862, 



P- 352. 

 Ar. Av. 247, 761 with ep. tioikiXos, nepinoiKiXos or Trrepon-oiViXos (cf. 

 Meineke, in loc.) ; cf. Suid. ecm KaTdcTTiKTos ttoiklXoh TrrepoTs' XtytTai St eni 

 8ovX<i)v KaTeaTiyp.eva)v. Ar. Ach. 875, common in Boeotia ; absent from 

 Crete, praeterquam in Cydoniatarum regione, Plin. x. 58 (83). Arist. 

 H. A. ix. 26, 617 daKaXainas to xP'^H-^ op-oiov dTTayrjvi. ix. 49 B, 633 ov 



TtTTJTlKOS dXX' fniyUOS KIU KOPiaTlKOi. Ael. H. A. iv. 42 TO 'l8iOV OVOp.a fj crd fV(l 



(f)(ovr] (f)deyyeTni /cat dvap-eXnei avTn. lb. vi. 45 ^ooicri 8f apa drTaydi 

 fiev dXeKTpvi'ivi exdiara, dXeKTpvuv 8' av ndXiv dTTaya. Socr. ap. Athen. 

 ix. 387 f., how the drTayds in Egypt said in times of famine Tp\s toIs 

 Kaicnvpyois KaKa (vide Casaub. in Athen. ii. p. 420, ed. 1600) ; cf. Ael 

 V. H. XV. 27. Alex. Mynd. in Athen. 1. c. p.tKpc3 pkv p-fi^av eVrl nep8iK0i, oXos 



