Advertisement

harpy (n.)

winged monster of ancient mythology, late 14c., from Old French harpie (14c.), from Latin harpyia, from Greek Harpyia (plural), literally "snatchers," which is probably related to harpazein "to snatch" (see rapid (adj.)). Metaphoric extension to "repulsively greedy person" is c. 1400.

In Homer they are merely personified storm winds, who were believed to have carried off any person that had suddenly disappeared. In Hesiod they are fair-haired and winged maidens who surpass the winds in swiftness, and are called Aello and Ocypete; but in later writers they are represented as disgusting monsters, with heads like maidens, faces pale with hunger, and claws like those of birds. The harpies ministered to the gods as the executors of vengeance. ["American Cyclopædia," 1874]

Others are reading

Advertisement
Definitions of harpy from WordNet
1
harpy (n.)
a malicious woman with a fierce temper;
Synonyms: vixen / hellcat
harpy (n.)
any of various fruit bats of the genus Nyctimene distinguished by nostrils drawn out into diverging tubes;
Synonyms: harpy bat / tube-nosed bat / tube-nosed fruit bat
harpy (n.)
large black-and-white crested eagle of tropical America;
Synonyms: harpy eagle / Harpia harpyja
2
Harpy (n.)
(Greek mythology) vicious winged monster; often depicted as a bird with the head of a woman;
From wordnet.princeton.edu