HARPIES - tradução para árabe
Diclib.com
Dicionário ChatGPT
Digite uma palavra ou frase em qualquer idioma 👆
Idioma:

Tradução e análise de palavras por inteligência artificial ChatGPT

Nesta página você pode obter uma análise detalhada de uma palavra ou frase, produzida usando a melhor tecnologia de inteligência artificial até o momento:

  • como a palavra é usada
  • frequência de uso
  • é usado com mais frequência na fala oral ou escrita
  • opções de tradução de palavras
  • exemplos de uso (várias frases com tradução)
  • etimologia

HARPIES - tradução para árabe

HALF-HUMAN AND HALF-BIRD PERSONIFICATION OF STORM WINDS FROM GREEK AND ROMAN MYTHOLOGY GENERALLY DEPICTED AS BIRDS WITH THE HEADS OF MAIDENS
Harpies; Harpy (Greek mythology); Harpie; Harpyiai; Okypode; Acholoe; Άρπυια; Harpys; Bird Monster; Bird monster; Jungfrauenadler; Harpier; Harpuiai
  • Greater coat of arms of the city of [[Nuremberg]]
  • Harpies in the infernal wood, from ''Inferno'' XIII, by [[Gustave Doré]], 1861.
  • A harpy in [[Ulisse Aldrovandi]]'s ''Monstrorum Historia'', Bologna, 1642.
  • A [[medieval]] depiction of a harpy as a bird-woman.
  • Mirror with figure of a Harpy, 11–12th century CE, [[Termez]], Uzbekistan

harpy         
مخلوق خرافى له وجه إمرأة وشكل طائر إمرأة / شريرة / مشاكسة شرهة
HARPIES         

ألاسم

أَفَّاك ; حُوَّل ; خادِع ; مُدَاوِر ; مُدَلِّس ; مُوَارِب ; نَصَّاب

HARPY         

ألاسم

أَفَّاك ; حُوَّل ; خادِع ; مُدَاوِر ; مُدَلِّس ; مُوَارِب ; نَصَّاب

Definição

Harpies

Wikipédia

Harpy

In Greek and Roman mythology, a harpy (plural harpies, Ancient Greek: ἅρπυια, romanized: hárpyia, pronounced [hárpyːa]; Latin: harpȳia) is a half-human and half-bird personification of storm winds. They feature in Homeric poems.

Exemplos do corpo de texto para HARPIES
1. And by the way, how do we know their husbands weren‘t planning to divorce these harpies?
2. Yet there are columnists here – yes, you, you cynical, oh so sophisticated harpies! – who laugh in its face.
3. Here we had the giant one–eyed Cyclopes, the fearsome Kraken sea beast, the multi–headed Hydra, the Chimera, the Harpies and the Minotaur of Crete.
4. Which brings me to the latest battle of the sexes, the one featuring the two starving harpies Melissa Miller and Julia McFarlane in the divorce cases being considered by the law lords.
5. Girls with legs like toothpicks (funny how there was no obesity in those days) would arrive like harpies yelling "my ball, my ball" and leave the pitch looking as mud–churned and battlescarred as the Somme.