μαντιχώρας

From LSJ

φοβοῦ τὸ γῆρας, οὐ γὰρ ἔρχεται μόνον → fear old age, for it never comes alone

Source
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Full diacritics: μαντῐχώρας Medium diacritics: μαντιχώρας Low diacritics: μαντιχώρας Capitals: ΜΑΝΤΙΧΩΡΑΣ
Transliteration A: mantichṓras Transliteration B: mantichōras Transliteration C: mantichoras Beta Code: mantixw/ras

English (LSJ)

-ου, ὁ, v. μαρτιχόρας.

Wikipedia EN

Martigora engraving

The manticore or mantichore (Latin: mantichora; reconstructed Old Persian: *martyahvārah; Modern Persian: مردخوار mard-khar) is a legendary creature from ancient Persian mythology, similar to the Egyptian sphinx that proliferated in Western European medieval art as well. It has the head of a human, the body of a lion, and the tail of a scorpion or a tail covered in venomous spines similar to porcupine quills. There are some accounts that the spines can be launched like arrows. It eats its victims whole, using its three rows of teeth, and leaves no bones behind.

The term "manticore" descends via Latin mantichora from Ancient Greek μαρτιχόρας (martikhórās) This in turn is a transliteration of an Old Persian compound word consisting of martīya 'man' and xuar- stem, 'to eat' (Mod. Persian: مرد; mard + خوردن; khordan); i.e., man-eater.

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

μαντῐχώρας: -ου, ὁ, ἴδε μαρτιχώρας.

Russian (Dvoretsky)

μαντιχώρας: ου ὁ = μαρτιχόρας.

German (Pape)

auch μαρτιχώρας, ὁ, od. μαρτιχόρας, ein unbestimmtes vierfüßiges Tier in Indien, mantichora, vielleicht eine Art Stachelschwein.

Translations

manticore

Danish: manticore; Dutch: mantichora; Finnish: manticora, mantikori; French: manticore; German: Mantikor; Ancient Greek: μαντιχώρας, μαρτιχόρας; Italian: manticora; Japanese: マンティコア; Korean: 만티코어; Latin: mantichora, mantichoras; Marathi: मॅन्टिकोर; Norwegian: manticora; Persian: مردخوار sg; Polish: mantykora; Portuguese: manticora, mantícora; Russian: мантикора; Spanish: mantícora; Swedish: mantikora; Tagalog: mantikora

man-eater

Azerbaijani: adamyeyən; Belarusian: людаед, людажэрца; Bulgarian: людоед; Chickasaw: hattak-apa'; Czech: lidožrout; Danish: menneskeæder; German: Menschenfresser; Hungarian: emberevő; Icelandic: mannæta; Maori: mangō-taniwha; Persian: آدمخوار; Polish: ludojad; Russian: людоед; Slovak: ľudožrút; Swedish: människoätare; Turkish: insan yiyici; Ukrainian: людої́д, людожер