IYr=— KAAANAPOI J$ 



IYI"= {continued). 



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

 Theocritus Id. ii, and Pindar Nem. iv, that the iu-y| was originally a 

 moon-char?n or invocation to the Moon-Goddess 'loo, a theory supported 

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

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

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

 not cry 'la>, 'Ia>, and the suggested derivation of its name and sanctity 

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

 Io and ivyg do come into relation with one another, the witch who by 

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

 into the bird wyg, Niceph. in Schol. ad Synesium, p. 360, Creuzer, Symb. 

 iii. 249 ; see also Schol. Pind. 1. c. It is thus quite possible that 'lob and 

 ury£ are after all cognate, though the bird's cry had nothing to do with 

 their etymology. 



iuy£ and 'ipis come into relation with one another, as both connected 

 with moon-worship ; and the dialectic form of the latter, i'/3u£ (Hesych., 

 ? "f vg) suggests perhaps an ancient confusion between the two names. 



"IXAA. A form of d^Xo, Hesych. Cf. Lob. Path. p. 107. Also 

 toTcXa, lx<*hrj, Hesych. : cf. Mod. Gk. ro-i^Xa. 



MXNEY'MflN. An unknown or fabulous small bird ; mentioned by 

 Nicander ap. Anton. Lib. c. 14. 



'IQNA'I* ncpHTTepd, Hesych. Vide s. v. otkds. 



MflNl'X. An unknown bird; mentioned among the opvidas iroraplovs 

 dpa koI Xifxvaiovs, Aristoph. Hist. Anim. Epit. i. 24 (Supplem. 

 Aristot. i. 1. p. 5, Berolini, 1885). 



KAKKA'BH, s. icaKica{3is. KaKicdpa, Hesych. (Cf. Sk. kukkubha.) A name 

 for the Partridge. 



Athen. ix. 390 a koXovvtcu $' 01 nepdacts vri iwlmf /ca/c/ca/Sai, as koi vn 

 KktcpRvos' enr) rdde Kai pe\os 'Aktcpdv | evpe, yeyXoacrcrapevop | KaKKaftidcov 

 a-ropa [ovopa, Casaub.] awdefxevos (Alcman, fr. 25 Bergk). Hence kokkci- 

 PiCav, 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. Trep8t|. 



KAAAMOAY'THI. An unknown bird. 



Ael. vi. 46 Kedpov tov KaXapobvTrjv a7roXXvon (fivWa. 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 laverokke, Rom. of 

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



