Bailly
οῦ (ὁ) héron (
Ardea major L.) IL.
10, 274 ; AR.
Av. 886 ; ARSTT.
H.A. 9, 1, 23 (cf.
Étym. ῥῳδιός.
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LSJ
ὁ, heron, Il. 10.274, Epich. 46, Semon. 9, Ar. Av. 886, Call. Aet. Oxy. 2080.64, Clitarch. 22 J., Ant.Lib. 7.7, etc. ; — also ῥῳδιός, Hippon. 63, and ἀρῳδιός; — Aristotle mentions three kinds ; ὁ πέλλος, prob.
common heron, Ardea cinerea ; ὁ λευκός, egret, A. alba, gazetta; ὁ ἀστερίας, bittern, A. Stellaris, HA 609b21 ; the ἐρῳδιός in Il. l.c. (cf. Ael. NA 1.1) was prob. a shearwater. (ἐρωδιός freq. in codd., even in Pap. of Call. l.c. (ii AD), but ἐρῳδιός (with ωι and oxyt.) Hdn. Gr. 2.924 and codd. Hom.)
Liddell-Scott-Jones, Greek-English Lexicon (9th ed., 1940)
Pape
ὁ, der Reiher, Il. 10.274, wo er rechtsfliegend als glückverkündender Vogel erscheint ; Aesch. frg. 257 ; Ar. Av. 886 ; Arist. H.A. 8.3.
Pape, Griechisch-deutsches Handwörterbuch (3. Aufl., 1914)
TBESG
the heron or hern , Lat. ardea, (Iliad by Homer) (ML)
Translators Brief lexicon of Extended Strongs for Greek based on Abbot-Smith, A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament (1922) (=AS), with corrections and adapted by Tyndale Scholars