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Harpy   Listen
Harpy

noun
(pl. harpies)
1.
A malicious woman with a fierce temper.  Synonyms: hellcat, vixen.
2.
(Greek mythology) vicious winged monster; often depicted as a bird with the head of a woman.
3.
Any of various fruit bats of the genus Nyctimene distinguished by nostrils drawn out into diverging tubes.  Synonyms: harpy bat, tube-nosed bat, tube-nosed fruit bat.
4.
Large black-and-white crested eagle of tropical America.  Synonyms: Harpia harpyja, harpy eagle.



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"Harpy" Quotes from Famous Books



... year 1729, with Youth, Health, a strong Frame, and a comely Countenance (as they told me), indeed, but with just two Guineas in my pouch for all my Fortune. Many a Lord Mayor of London has begun the World, 'tis said, with a yet more slender Provision (I wonder what Harpy Hopwood had to begin with?) and Eighteenpence would seem to be the average of Capital Stock for an Adventurer that is to heap up Riches. Still I seemed to have made my Start in Life's Voyage a ...
— The Strange Adventures of Captain Dangerous, Vol. 2 of 3 • George Augustus Sala

... for several dates with Sylvia. Out of the office she wasn't quite the protective harpy about Paul Cleary that she had been in the office, although the thought was ...
— The Trouble with Telstar • John Berryman

... his being set adrift in an open boat, with his infant daughter and his books for company, are wrecked through his art upon the island of which he has become the master. Ariel, the spirit who serves Prospero, a mysterious, ever changing form, now fire, now a Nymph, now an invisible musician, now a Harpy, striking guilt into the conscience (and yet apparently not interested in either vice or virtue, but {206} longing only for free idleness), guides all to Prospero's cave, and receives freedom for ...
— An Introduction to Shakespeare • H. N. MacCracken

... winter apple was to leave a shaky tooth behind) obligingly took the first bite, but made that bite include nearly half the apple—that rapacious betrayer of confiding helplessness deserved to be called a harpy. But she wasn't; she was ...
— The Madigans • Miriam Michelson

... and winged. So HESIOD drew The legendary Harpy crew, The "Spoilers" of old fable; Maidens, yet monsters, woman-faced, With iron hearts that had disgraced ...
— Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 102, May 14, 1892 • Various


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