FAAYE rYO> 47 



rAQTTl'l. An undetermined bird. 



Arist. H. A. viii. 12, 597 b. Departs with the quails : y\5>rrav e|cryo- 

 tievrjv e^ei pexpi 7roppo>. Cf. Plin. X. 23 (33). 



Supposed by Sundevall (op. c. p. 129) to be identical with iVy, the 

 Wryneck, on account of the protrusible tongue ; as also by Niphus, 

 in Arist., v. Camus, ii. 383 ; the Wryneck however winters in Greece 

 (Lindermayer p. 41). Belon identified it with the Flamingo, Gesner, 

 followed by Linnaeus, from a confusion with Ger. or Sw. Glutt, with 

 the Greenshank, in connexion with which latter bird the name survives 

 in modern zoology. Vide s. v. c\a<f>is. 



PNA'<I>AAOI. An unknown bird. 



Arist. H. A. ix. l6, 6l6b (pwvrjv c^ei dyaQrjv, KOI TO .^pco/ia /caXo?, Kai 

 (3iop,t]xavos, KOI TO ddos evrrpeTrqff. 8oKel 8' flvai gevixos opvis' 6\iyaKis 

 yap (paiveTai ev rots pf] oiKfiois TOTTOIS. 



Gesner suggests the Bohemian Waxwing, Ampelis garrulus, L., 

 which however has not T^V (pcwrjv ayaOr^v, nor is there any evidence 

 of the Waxwing reaching Greece. Probably the foreign name of 

 a foreign bird. 



TOINE'EI' nopals, Hesych. Perhaps for [f]o/as, q. v. 

 ro'AMII* ^dp, TO opveov, Hesych. 

 ro'PTYE- ZpTvg, Hesych. Quasi fo'pru. 



rPA'nil* eifiof opveov, Hesych. Perhaps akin to ^pawn-is: cf. J. G. 



Schneider in Arist. H. A. viii. 5. 4, p. 590. 

 rPAY'KAAOI- opvis Tempos, Hesych. Cf. icauicaXi'as. 



PPY'riAl* at v0<r<nal T>V yvn&V ol 8f yvnai, Hesych. 



rPYHArETOI. A fabulous bird. Ar. Ran. 929. 



TY'rHI. A fabulous bird : supposed to be connected with Lith. gufa, 

 guzutys, a Stork. 



Dion. De Avib. ii. 16 yvyijs opvis eVrtV, avaftoav net Kai qftfiv TOI/TO 

 doKciiv, os TOVS opveis ev VVKT\ Karecrdiei TOVS dfj.(pi^iovs. Tf]v fKfivov y\a)o~a'av 

 e'i TIS f/TTore/MOt ^"^^ Ka ' <payew Soiy TCO fj-^Tra) \O\OVVTI iraidico, Travrco? 

 avrov Ta\(Ds \vcrei Tt)V O-IU>TTI]V. 



TY'vl/. A Vulture. See also deros, aiyuirios, i/epros, irepKKoirrepos, 

 $r\vi\. Mod. Gk. opveov, dyiovwa (Byzantios). 



Frequent in Homer, usually with the idea of feeding on carrion, 

 II. iv. 237, xi. 162, xvi. 836, xxii. 42 ; Od. xxii. 30, &c. Cf. Eur. Tr. 595 

 cr<afj.ara vfKptov yu\^l (pepeiv rc'rarat : Eur. Rh. 5^5 7rc Tf LV0 ^ S 



. Ov. Tr. vi. n, Lucret. iv. 680, Sil. Ital. iii. 396, &c. 

 Used metaphorically, Eur. Andr. 75. 



