Faunnoun
(Roman mythology) A woodland creature with pointed ears, legs, and short horns of a goat and a fondness for unrestrained revelry.
Faunnoun
A god of fields and shipherds, diddering little from the satyr. The fauns are usually represented as half goat and half man.
Faunnoun
ancient Italian deity in human shape, with horns, pointed ears and a goat's tail; equivalent to Greek satyr
Faun
The faun (Latin: faunus, Ancient Greek: φαῦνος, phaunos, pronounced [pʰaunos]) is a mythological half human–half goat creature appearing in Roman mythology. The goat men, more commonly affiliated with the Satyrs of Greek mythology than the fauns of Roman, are bipedal creatures with the legs and tail of a goat and the head, torso, and arms of a man, and are often depicted with goat's horns and pointed ears.
Satyrnoun
(Greek mythology) A male companion of Pan or Dionysus with the tail of a goat and a perpetual erection.
Satyrnoun
(Roman mythology) A faun.
Satyrnoun
A lecherous man.
Satyrnoun
Any of various butterflies of the nymphalid subfamily Satyrinae, having brown wings marked with eyelike spots; a meadow brown.
Satyrnoun
(obsolete) The orangutan.
Satyrnoun
A sylvan deity or demigod, represented as part man and part goat, and characterized by riotous merriment and lasciviousness.
Satyrnoun
Any one of many species of butterflies belonging to the family Nymphalidæ. Their colors are commonly brown and gray, often with ocelli on the wings. Called also meadow browns.
Satyrnoun
The orang-outang.
Satyrnoun
man with strong sexual desires
Satyrnoun
one of a class of woodland deities; attendant on Bacchus; identified with Roman fauns
Satyr
In Greek mythology, a satyr (Greek: σάτυρος, translit. sátyros, pronounced [sátyros]), also known as a silenus or silenos (Greek: σειληνός seilēnós [seːlɛːnós]), is a male nature spirit with ears and a tail resembling those of a horse, as well as a permanent, exaggerated erection.