FAUN - significado y definición. Qué es FAUN
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Qué (quién) es FAUN - definición

MYTHOLOGICAL CREATURE
Fauns; Faune
  • Faun (satyr) of [[Praxiteles]] in the [[Capitoline Museum]], Rome

faun         
(fauns)
A faun is an imaginary creature which is like a man with goat's legs and horns.
N-COUNT
Faun         
·noun A god of fields and shipherds, diddering little from the satyr. The fauns are usually represented as half goat and half man.
faun         
[f?:n]
¦ noun Roman Mythology a lustful rural god represented as a man with a goat's horns, ears, legs, and tail.
Origin
ME: from the name of the pastoral god Faunus.

Wikipedia

Faun

The faun (Latin: faunus, Ancient Greek: φαῦνος, phaunos, pronounced [pʰaunos]) is a half-human and half-goat mythological creature appearing in Greek and Roman mythology.

Originally fauns of Roman mythology were spirits (genii) of rustic places, lesser versions of their chief, the god Faunus. Before their conflation with Greek satyrs, they and Faunus were represented as nude men (e.g. the Barberini Faun). Later fauns became copies of the satyrs of Greek mythology, who themselves were originally shown as part-horse rather than part-goat.

By Renaissance times fauns were depicted as bipedal creatures with the horns, legs, and tail of a goat and the head, torso, and arms of a human; they are often depicted with pointed ears. These late-form mythological creatures borrowed their appearance from the satyrs, who in turn borrowed their appearance from the god Pan of the Greek pantheon. They were symbols of peace and fertility, and their Greek chieftain, Silenus, was a minor deity of Greek mythology.

Ejemplos de uso de FAUN
1. Meanwhile in Ibiza, the boy himself leapt nimble as a faun on stage and asked if anyone in the audience had a septum he could use to play his guitar.
2. The sensual rump of a maiden who, seen from another angle, turns out to be the gender–bending god Hermaphroditus –– a mighty faun statue who lost his manhood, then suffered the indignity of having a tiny replacement attached.
3. And on «The More You Do It (The More I Like It Done to Me),» originally recorded by Ronnie Dyson, Cole cleverly pays homage to her own No. 1 hit, «This Will Be (An Everlasting Love).» Genre: R&B Bonnie ‘Prince‘ Billy –– ‘The Letting Go‘: Reviewed by: JILL MENZE Will Oldham‘s latest album under the guise Bonnie «Prince» Billy finds the singer/songwriter at his lo–fi best, with reflective, at times haunting, songs supplemented by delicate strings and wistful harmonies from Faun Fables singer Dawn McCarthy.