IYr=— KAAANAPOI 73 



lYFH {conti lined). 



Bury (J. of Hellen. St. vii. pp. 157-160) supposes, chiefly from 

 Theocritus Id. ii, and Pindar Nem. iv, that the 'ivy^ was originally a 

 1/iooH-charin or invocation to the Moon-Goddess 'iw, a theory supported 

 by Mart. ix. 30, where rhombus is in like manner a moon-charm, as 

 also by such parallel passages as Virg. Eel. viii. 69, and Tibull. i. 8. 21. 

 The luyl was undoubtedly thus used in lunar rites, but the bird does 

 not cry 'icb, 'lo), and the suggested derivation of its name and sanctity 

 from such a cry cannot hold. It is interesting, however, to find that 

 lo and Ivy^ do come into relation with one another, the witch who by 

 her spells had made Zeus enamoured of lo, being transformed by Juno 

 into the bird i'uyl, Niceph. in Schol. ad Synesium, p. 360, Creuzer, Symb. 

 iii. 249 ; see also Schol. Find. I.e. It is thus quite possible that 'iw and 

 tu-yl are after all cognate, though the bird's cry had nothing to do with 

 their etymology. 



i'u-yl and l'/3i? come into relation with one another, as both connected 

 with moon-worship ; and the dialectic form of the latter, 'i^v^ (Hesych., 

 ? i'f I'D suggests perhaps an ancient confusion between the two names. 



"IXAA. A form of Kt'^Xa, Hesych. Cf. Lob. Path. p. 107. Also 



la-fcXa, lxa\r], Hesych. : cf. Mod. Gk. ralx^a. 



'IXNEY'MHN. An unknown or fabulous small bird ; mentioned by 

 Nicander ap. Anton. Lib. c. 14. 



'IflNA'Z" nfpt(XTepd, Hesych. Vide s. v. oivds. 



'iflNl'Z. An unknown bird; mentioned among the opvidas Trorafilovs 

 apa Kal Xipmiovs, Aristoph. Hist. Anim. Epit. i. 24 (Supplem. 

 Aristot. i. i. p. 5, Berolini, 1885). 



KAKKA'BH, j. KaKKaPi's. KOKKa^a, Hcsych. (Cf. Sk. kukkubha^ A name 

 for the Partridge. 



Athen. ix. 390 a Kokovvrai S o\ nepdiKes in iviatv KaKKa^ai, w? koI vn' 

 AKKp-avos' 'iirrj Tuhe koX piXos AXKpdv \ evpe, yfyXuxraapevov | KaKKa^ldcav 

 (TTopa [ovopa, Casaub.] (Twdtpevos (Alcman, fr. 25 Bergk). Hence KaKKa- 

 ^i^eiv, Arist. H.A. iv. 9, 536b; Athen. I.e.; cf. Anthol. Lat. 733 (ed. 

 Riese) Interea perdix cacabat nidumque revisit. Cf. Stat. Sylv. ii. 4. 20 

 quaeque refert iungens iterata vocabula perdix. Vide s. v. irepSi^. 



KAAAMOAY'THI. An unknown bird. 



Ael. vi. 46 Kedpov Tov KaXapo8vTT]v dnoXXva-i (f)vXXn. Cf. Phile, 664. 



KA'AANAPOI. The Calandra Lark, Alauda Calandra, L., Melan- 

 corypha calandra, auctt. The Chelaundre or Calendre of 

 Chaucer, who distinguishes it from the lark or Javerokke, Rom. of 

 the Rose, 662, cf. v. 655. Skeat (in loc.) derives the word, 



