mermaid$48048$ - traducción al griego
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mermaid$48048$ - traducción al griego

FAKE MUMMIFIED BODY OF A HALF-MAMMAL HALF-FISH
Feejee Mermaid; Feejee mermaid; Fiji Mermaid; Feejee mirmaid; Pickled Mermaid; Pickled mermaid; Feegee mermaid
  • The Banff Merman, similar to a Fiji mermaid, on display at the Indian Trading Post
  • ―[[Harvard University]]'s [[Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology]]}}}}
  • P. T. Barnum's Feejee mermaid from 1842
  • A merman constructed out of wood carving, and parts of monkey and fish, [[Booth Museum]], Brighton

mermaid      
n. σειρήνα, νεράιδα, γοργόνα

Definición

mermaid
(mermaids)
In fairy stories and legends, a mermaid is a woman with a fish's tail instead of legs, who lives in the sea.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Fiji mermaid

The Fiji mermaid (also Feejee mermaid) was an object composed of the torso and head of a juvenile monkey sewn to the back half of a fish. It was a common feature of sideshows where it was presented as the mummified body of a creature that was supposedly half mammal and half fish, a version of a mermaid. The original had fish scales with animal hair superimposed on its body and pendulous breasts on its chest. The mouth was wide open with its teeth bared. The right hand was against the right cheek, and the left tucked under its lower left jaw. This mermaid was supposedly caught near the Fiji Islands in the South Pacific. Several replicas and variations have also been made and exhibited under similar names and pretexts. P. T. Barnum exhibited the original in Barnum's American Museum in New York in 1842, but it then disappeared—likely destroyed in one of the many fires that destroyed parts of Barnum's collections.