lyco-, lyc-, lycos- +

(Greek: wolf, wolves)

lycanthrope (s) (noun), lycanthropes (pl)
1. According to some writers, it is a synonym of werewolf; one of those people who (according to medieval superstition) assumed the form of wolves: In folklore, a lycanthrope is the ability of a human to undergo transformation into a wolf.
2. Etymology: the term comes from ancient Greek lykánthropos; lýkos, "wolf" + ánthropos, "mankind, human".

Other applicable terms include: insania lupina; melancholia canina; melancholia zooanthropic.

lycanthropic (adjective), more lycanthropic, most lycanthropic
A reference to a form of madness, described by ancient writers: The lycanthropic person had the delusion that he or she was a wolf with correspondingly abnormal behavior.

There were those who thought that there could be a magical lycanthropic transformation of someone into a wolf.

lycanthropist (s) (noun), lycanthropists (pl)
Someone who is affected by the mental disease that involves thinking that he or she is a horse.
lycanthropy, lykanthropy (s) (noun); lycanthropies, lykanthropies
A kind of insanity described by ancient writers, in which the patient imagined himself or herself to be a wolf, and had the instincts and propensities of a wolf: Now lycanthropy is occasionally applied as a name of those forms of insanity in which patients imagine themselves to be beasts, and exhibit depraved appetites, alteration of voices, etc., in accordance with this delusion.

Lycanthropy was also the kind of witchcraft which made a person assume that he or she had the form and the nature of a wolf.

A lycanthrope is calling for guidance.

A lycanthrope is trying to get counseling during his monthly full-moon phase, but the service is busy.

"Thank you for calling the lycanthrope hot line. All of our operators are busy right now taking care of werewolves; so, if you will please hold, we'll get back to you as soon as possible."

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Lycanthropy, the changing of men into wolves has been found over the centuries in literature and folklore through out the world

The term, werewolf, comes from the Latin vir for "man", literally, "man-wolf"; in Russia, the oborol; in Portugal, the lobishomen; in France, the loup-garou; and in Scandinavia, the vagr.

In medieval days, suspected werewolves were sometimes flayed alive in the search for the dreaded wolf skin hidden beneath their human one. While other man-into-beast stories certainly exist, like the frenzied bear-shirters, or "berserkers", of Scandinavian origin, there are far more accounts of people being changed into wolves.

Lycanthropy is mentioned by Herodotus and Pliny, and there is even a section of the 11th-century treatise Decreta dealing with werewolves who seek absolution. King James VI of Scotland gave an unusually sensitive account of the warwoolfe in his Demonologie of 1597, calling it "a natural superabundance of melancholie."

lycomania
Lycanthropy or the belief that one can change him/herself or others into a wolf or some other animal.
lycoperdonosis
1. A respiratory disease caused by inhaling large quantities of spores from the mature mushroom commonly called "puffball".
2. Etymology: Greek lykos, "wolf" plus perdesthai, "to break wind" plus osis, "condition".
Taber's Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary, Edition 18, F.A. Davis Company, Philadelphia, 1993.
lycorexia
1. A wolfish or ravenous appetite.
2. An excessive appetite like that of a wolf.
lycosid
A spider of the family Lycosidae, comprising the wolf spiders.

Related wolf-word unit: lup-.