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Pyrrhia bifaciata (Staudinger, 1888) Pyrrhia cilisca (Guenée, 1852) Pyrrhia exprimens (Walker, 1857) Pyrrhia hedemanni (Staudinger, 1892) Pyrrhia purpurina (Esper, 1804) Pyrrhia treitschkei (Frivaldszky, 1835) Pyrrhia umbra (Hufnagel, 1766) Pyrrhia victorina (Sodoffsky, 1849)
16th-century woodcut by Virgil Solis, illustrating lines 347–415 of Ovid's Metamorphoses. In Greek mythology, Pyrrha (/ ˈ p ɪ r ə /; Ancient Greek: Πύῤῥα, romanized: Pýrrha) was the daughter of Epimetheus and Pandora and wife of Deucalion of whom she had three sons, Hellen, Amphictyon, Orestheus; and three daughters Protogeneia, Pandora and Thyia.
Pyrrhia umbra, the bordered sallow, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Johann Siegfried Hufnagel in 1766. It is found in all of Europe, east through Anatolia to Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nepal and through central Asia to Japan. In mountains it can be found up to elevations of 1,600 meters. Larva
In Greek mythology, Pyrrha (/ ˈ p ɪ r ə /; Ancient Greek: Πύρρα) may refer to the following women: . Pyrrha, wife of Deucalion. [1]Pyrrha, a Theban princess as the younger daughter of King Creon [2] probably by his wife Eurydice [3] or Henioche. [4]
Many of these are degenerations in the pronunciation of names that originated in other languages. Sometimes a well-known namesake with the same spelling has a markedly different pronunciation. These are known as heterophonic names or heterophones (unlike heterographs, which are written differently but pronounced the same).
Pyrrhia bifaciata is a moth of the family Noctuidae. It is found in China , Japan ( Hokkaido , Honshu and Shikoku ), the Russian Far East (the Primorye region, the Amur region, southern Khabarovsk and southern Sakhalin ), Taiwan and on the Korean Peninsula
According to Puck News’ Matthew Belloni, Hader, who was on the show for eight years, replied to his invitation with “a polite decline.”. Hader was, however, still seen during the special in ...
Although the pyrrhic by itself is not used in analysis of classical Greek prosody, examples exist of epigrammatic poems that employ nothing but short syllables (except at line ends where a syllable always scans long), creating a pyrrhic-like effect, such as an epigram addressed to the Cynic philosopher Diogenes and recorded in the Suda: