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- Cockatrice
Cockatrice is an open source, multi-platform application for playing tabletop card games over a network The program's server design prevents users from manipulating the game for unfair advantage
- Cockatrice - Wikipedia
A cockatrice is a mythical beast, essentially a two-legged dragon, wyvern, or serpent -like creature with a rooster 's head Described by Laurence Breiner as "an ornament in the drama and poetry of the Elizabethans ", it was featured prominently in English thought and myth for centuries
- Cockatrice | Medieval, Dragon-like, Basilisk | Britannica
Cockatrice, in the legends of Hellenistic and Roman times, a small serpent, possibly the Egyptian cobra, known as a basilikos (“kinglet”) and credited with powers of destroying all animal and vegetable life by its mere look or breath
- Cockatrice: Mythical Creature - Mythical Encyclopedia
Cockatrice is a mythical creature that has been a part of English folklore for centuries It is often depicted as a two-legged dragon or serpent-like creature with the head of a rooster
- Cockatrice Mythology: A Beast of Doom and Heroic Redemption
Mythical Attributes: A serpentine or dragon-like creature with the head of a rooster Role in Mythos: Known for its deadly gaze and poisonous breath, the Cockatrice is often associated with bringing doom or turning people into stone
- Topical Bible: Cockatrice
In biblical literature, the cockatrice symbolizes evil, danger, and divine judgment Its mythical nature underscores the severity of the threat it represents The creature's lethal gaze or venom is often interpreted as a metaphor for sin and its destructive consequences
- Cockatrice | Mythical bestiary Wikia | Fandom
Cockatrices, also called Henatrices for females, are a species of magical beasts, originating in Greece and Rome, that have spread around the world They are basically the similar-yet-opposing counterparts to basilisks
- The Career of the Cockatrice
The word cockatrice is medieval in origin, and its cognates first appear in France Its history is tied up with the transmission of an anecdote from Pliny's Natural History concerning the crocodile: After his dinner of fish, this creature always falls asleep on the shore with his mouth full
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