释义 |
manticoreenUK
man·ti·core M0090000 (măn′tĭ-kôr′)n. A legendary monster having the head of a man, the body of a lion, and the tail of a dragon or scorpion. [Middle English manticores, from Latin mantichōra, from Greek mantikhōras, variant of martiokhōras, from Old Iranian *martiya-khvāra-, man-eater : *martiya-, man; see mer- in Indo-European roots + *-khvāra-, eater; see swel- in Indo-European roots.]manticore (ˈmæntɪˌkɔː) n (Non-European Myth & Legend) a monster with a lion's body, a scorpion's tail, and a man's head with three rows of teeth. It roamed the jungles of India and, like the Sphinx, would ask travellers a riddle and kill them when they failed to answer it[C21: from Latin manticora, from Greek mantichōrās, corruption of martichorās, from Persian mardkhora man-eater]man•ti•core (ˈmæn tɪˌkɔr, -ˌkoʊr) n. a legendary monster with a man's head, a lion's body, and the tail of a dragon or a scorpion. [1300–50; Middle English < Latin mantichōrās < Greek] manticorea mythical or fabulous beast with the head of a man, the body of a lion or tiger, and the feet and tail of a dragon or scorpion. Also spelled mantichora.See also: AnimalsThesaurusNoun | 1. | manticore - a mythical monster having the head of man (with horns) and the body of a lion and the tail of a scorpionmantichora, manticora, mantigermythical creature, mythical monster - a monster renowned in folklore and myth |
manticoreenUK Related to manticore: Mythical creaturesSynonyms for manticorenoun a mythical monster having the head of man (with horns) and the body of a lion and the tail of a scorpionSynonyms- mantichora
- manticora
- mantiger
Related Words- mythical creature
- mythical monster
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