请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 lycanthropy
释义

lycanthropy

enUK

ly·can·thro·py

L0302100 (lī-kăn′thrə-pē)n.1. In folklore, the magical ability to assume the form and characteristics of a wolf.2. A delusion that one has become or assumed the characteristics of a wolf or other animal.

lycanthropy

(laɪˈkænθrəpɪ) n1. (European Myth & Legend) the supposed magical transformation of a person into a wolf2. (Psychiatry) psychiatry a delusion in which a person believes that he is a wolf[C16: from Greek lukānthropía, from lukos wolf + anthrōpos man] lycanthropic adj

ly•can•thro•py

(laɪˈkæn θrə pi)

n. 1. a delusion in which one imagines oneself to be a wolf or other wild animal. 2. the supposed or fabled assumption by a human being of the appearance of a wolf. [1575–85; < Greek] ly•can•throp•ic (ˌlaɪ kənˈθrɒp ɪk) adj.

lycanthropy

1. Psychiatry. Also called lycomania. a kind of insanity in which the patient believes himself to be a beast, especially a wolf.
2. the supposed or fabled assumption of the form of a wolf by a human being. — lycanthropic, adj.
See also: Wolves
Thesaurus
Noun1.lycanthropy - (folklore) the magical ability of a person to assume the characteristics of a wolflycanthropy - (folklore) the magical ability of a person to assume the characteristics of a wolfmagical ability, magical power - an ability to perform magicfolklore - the unwritten lore (stories and proverbs and riddles and songs) of a culture
Translations
lycanthropie

lycanthropy

enUK

lycanthropy

(līkăn`thrəpē), in folklore, assumption by a human of the appearance and characteristics of an animal. Ancient belief in lycanthropy was widespread, and it still exists in parts of the world. Certain African tribes have their "leopardmen" and the like, and literatures all over the world have tales of men changing to animals. One of the most widely held of these superstitions is the belief in the werewolf (a person who either willingly or unwillingly changes into a wolf, eats human flesh or drinks human blood, then returns to his natural form). The lycanthrope, akin to the vampire, is thought to undergo his change by means of witchcraft or magic. In the Middle Ages the church condemned lycanthropy as a form of sorcery and often ruthlessly punished the supposed offenders. The term is also applied to a form of insanity in which a person believes himself to be an animal and behaves accordingly.
Werewolf of Eschenbach, 1685. Courtesy Fortean Picture Library.

Lycanthropy

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

The transformation of a human being into the form of a wolf. From the Greek lukos, a wolf, and anthropos, a man. Such a human, transformed, is known as a werewolf. This, in turn, comes from the Anglo-Saxon wer, man, and wulf, wolf. There are many folk tales of werewolves in all countries of the world where wolves are, or were, found. In other countries that have not known the wolf, there are folk tales of such things as weretigers, -bears, -leopards, -panthers, or -foxes.

Some people believed that the transformation took place solely in the mind of the person. In other words, no physical changes took place; the affected person simply believed that the changes had taken place. Yet there were many well documented cases—several in France in 1598, for example—that seemed to prove otherwise.

During the time of the trials for witchcraft at the end of the sixteenth century, there were a number of cases of lycanthropy. Geiler von Kayserberg's book on witchcraft, Die Emeis (Strasbourg, 1517), contains an illustration of a man being attacked by a werewolf. The Révérend Père M. Mar. Guaccius's Compendium maleficarum (Milan, 1626) has an engraving of a witch turned into a wolf. Various German works of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries also show such pictures. In many of the British witch trials evidence was presented of witches transforming themselves into a variety of animals: rabbits, hares, cats, dogs, mice, crows, and wolves. In 1573, Gilles Garnier of Dole, France, admitted to becoming a werewolf and killing a ten-year-old girl, tearing her body to pieces with his teeth and claws. In 1589, Peter Stumpf of Bedburg, near Cologne, under torture admitted that he changed into such an animal with the aid of a magic belt that the devil had given him. He could change back into a man, he said, by removing the belt. Among others, Stumpf killed his own son and twelve other children, plus two young women and various livestock. He was sentenced to be horribly tortured then burned alive at the stake, along with his daughter.

Vergil, the Roman poet, in his Eclogues (c. 20 BCE), wrote, "Often have I seen Moeris turn into a wolf and hide in these woods: often too have I seen him summon the spirits from the depths of the tomb and transfer crops elsewhere." Pliny the Elder (23-79 CE) spoke of one of the clan of Anthius, who was chosen by ballot of the family and led away to a certain pool in the region of Arcadia. There he hung his clothes on an oak tree, swam across the pool, and went into the woods on the far side to transform into a wolf. He remained in that form for nine years before swimming back across the pool and changing back into a man. According to William Stokes (Religion of the Celts, 1873), St. Patrick cursed a certain race in Ireland so that every seven years they and their descendants would become werewolves.

Witches main body 12/22/08 11:34 AM Page 310

lycanthropy

enUK

lycanthropy

 [li-kan´thro-pe] a delusion in which the patient believes that he is a wolf or other animal or that he can change into one.

ly·can·thro·py

(lī-kan'thrŏ-pē), The morbid delusion that one is a wolf, possibly a mental atavism of the werewolf superstition. [G. lykos, wolf, + anthrōpos, man]

lycanthropy

(lī-kăn′thrə-pē)n. A delusion that one has become or assumed the characteristics of a wolf or other animal.

ly·can·thro·py

(lī-kan'thrŏ-pē) The morbid delusion that one is a wolf. [G. lykos, wolf, +anthrōpos, man]

lycanthropy

enUK
  • noun

Words related to lycanthropy

noun (folklore) the magical ability of a person to assume the characteristics of a wolf

Related Words

  • magical ability
  • magical power
  • folklore
随便看

 

英语词典包含2567994条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/31 9:49:03