lEMIPAMII— IKQ* I^- 



IITTH {coniimicd). 



Mod. Gk. aKaXo6dpr]s, (TcfivpiKTrjs, and TaonavonovXi, i. e. the little 

 shepherd (Heldr.). 



AriSt. H. A. ix. I, 609 b fierw Tvokfjiiov' Karayvvii yap to. w'a tov deTOv'. 

 ibid. 17, 616 b pd)(ipos, Tt)v 8e didvoinv fvdiKros Kn\ fidrjficov Kcii ev/SiWor, 

 Km Xeyerai (papfiuKeia eivni 8tu to noXvidpis fivai' iroKvyovos 8e Koi (ureKvos, 

 Kai ^rj v\oKOTTov(ra. 



Callim. Fr. 173 (in Etym. M.) 6 5' i)\eos ovS' enl aiTTrjv I3\(\j/as. 

 A good omen to lovers, Schol. in Ar. Av. 705 ; fr. ap. Suid. eyo) jueV 

 0) AevKiTTTTrj 8e^ia cti'tti;. 



21 TTOZ* cr'iTTov, 01 jieu yXavKa' ^ Kicrcrnv' 17 UpaKa, Hesych. 



[o-iVtv, (TLTTas and criVros are all doubtful and corrupt words. They 

 are probably akin to the equally corrupt and obscure Tn-noa, which bird, 

 like a-iTTr], is allied to the woodpeckers and hostile to the eagle.] 



IKAAI'APII. (MSS. have AcaXi'Sptr, aKav8pts, aKa\i8pes. Schneider sug- 

 gests crKaXv8p[s. Possibly identical with tnaXei'Spis, q.v.) 

 An unknown bird ; taken by Belon and later writers for a species 

 of Sandpiper, e. g. Totanns calidris, auctt., the Redshank : but 

 any one whom it pleases may interpret it as a Wagtail, whose 

 gray plumage is enlivened with a ' notKiXla ' of yellow. 



Arist. H. A. viii. 3) 593 h to ovpalov Kive'i, noiKiXlav i'x^h '''o ^' oXov 

 (Tno8oei^fs (mentioned with axoiviXos, KiyKXos, and nvynpyos). 



IKI'AAOI" hrivos, Hesych. Cf. jBdo-KiXXos. 



ZKl'vp. Vide s. v. CTffapdatoi/. 



IKOAO'riAE. Generally supposed, and by all the older commentators, 

 to be identical with daKaXwTras, the WoGdeock. Mod. Gk. 



daKaXonoKas, 6pvi6oaKaXi8a (Coray), ^vXoKOTTa (Heldr.), ^vXopviOa 

 (Bik.), pneKaTa-a ( = Fr. d/casse). With a-KoX-6na^, cf. Gk. cr-KoX-o\//-, 

 (TKiiXoxl/, andXa^ : rt. of L. cul/i'f, &C. 



Arist. H. A. ix. 8, 614 en\ 8ev8pov ov KadiCei, dXX' enl rij? yt]s. Nemesian. 

 Aucup. fr. 21 (in Wernsdorf's Poet. Lat. Min.) praeda est facilis et 

 amoena Scolopax. 



[(indXa^ or crK(iXo\//' in Theophr. De Sign. Temp. p. 439, ed. Heinsii, 

 is sometimes taken to apply not to the mole but to this bird : cf. 

 J. G. Schneider, in Arist., vol. iv. p. 131.] 



ZKQ>. Etym. doubtful. The derivation from (TKema is not more 

 certain than the older one from o-kcottto) (Athen. and Aelian). 

 The o- may be a late prefix, from the false analogy with oKanTeiv. 

 According to Alex. INIyndius, ap. Athen. ix. 391 b. Homer wrote 



