TAAY5— rY* 47 



rAQTN'I. An undetermined bird. 



Arist. H. A. viii. 12, 597 b. Departs with the quails : y\a>TTav e'£ayo- 

 pevrjv e^ei pe"xP l noppo». 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. cXckJh's. 



rNA'4>AAOX. An unknown bird. 



Arist. H. A. ix. 16, 616 b (pujvqv e;(ei dyadrjv, Kai to XP^H- a *aXos, Kai 

 f$iofxr}xa.vo$, Kai to eldos ev7rpenf)S. 8okcI 5' eivai t-eviKos opvis' okiyaKis 

 yap (paiverai ev toIs pq oIkciois tottois. 



Gesner suggests the Bohemian Waxwing, Ampelt's garru/us, L., 

 which however has not ttjv cpcovqv dyaBrjv, nor is there any evidence 

 of the Waxwing reaching Greece. Probably the foreign name of 

 a foreign bird. 



roiNE'EI- Kopaices, Hesych. Perhaps for \_f~jolvds, q. v. 



rO'AMII' yj/dp, to opveov, Hesych. 



ro'PTYE- '6pTv£, Hesych. Quasi f6prv£. 



rPA'mi' eldos opveov, Hesych. Perhaps akin to Bpavrris: cf. J. G. 



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

 rPAY'KAAOI* opvis Tempos, Hesych. Cf. KauicaXias. 



TPY nAI* ai veoao~iai to>v yvirSnv' ol be yvnai, Hesych. 



rPYriArETOX. A fabulous bird. Ar. Ran. 929. 



TY'rHX. A fabulous bird : supposed to be connected with Lith. gu/a, 

 guzutys, a Stork. 



Dion. De Avib. ii. 16 yvyrjs opvis eaTiv, dvajBoav del Kai qfteiv tovto 

 8okS>v, os tovs opveis ev vvkti Kareo-Oiei tovs dp(pifiiovs. Tqv e\etvov y\5>o~o~av 

 ei tls dnoTepoi \o\kcc Kai cpayelv doit) to> p^nco \a\ovvTi naidia, navroiS 

 avrov ra^eo)? Xvcrei Tqv anonqv. 



TY'vl/. A Vulture. See also de-ros, aiyumos, vepros, TrepKydirrepos, 

 $f\w\. Mod. Gk. opveov, dyioima (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 

 aipaToevra trcojuara veKpwv yv\js\ (pepeiv reVarai : Eur. Rh. 5 1 5 ire reivols 



ywtyi doivaTTjpiov. Ov. Tr. vi. ii, Lucret. iv. 680, Sil. Ital. iii. 396, &c. 

 Used metaphorically, Eur. Andr. 75. 



