лиликъ

Etymology
The same text already occurs in the 1499 – where the reading  is presumably erroneous due to the incidence of the conjunction  – which served the basis for the  and is a compilation of various partial translations of largely Balkan origin, hence a borrowing from, 🇨🇬, , from  is plausible; translating the ’s  which translates. From here it went into the 1871, worded и нощный вранъ, и лиликъ-тъ, и ивинъ-тъ.

Noun

 * 1) stork
 * 2) * 1581, , Leviticus 11.17 from 13–19:
 * "cu"

- И си́хъ гнꙋшайтеся ѿ пти́цъ, и да не ꙗ́сте и́хъ, гнꙋ́си сꙋ́ть. Орла̀ и но́га, и морьска́го орла̀, и неѩ́сыти, и кти́на, и е́же къ си́мъ подо́бна, вра́бїѧ, и вра́на, и совы̀ и подо́бнаѧ и́мъ: и вы́пелнца, и сꙋхола́плѧ, и и́же и́мъ подо́бнаѧ, и ꙗ́стреба и́же подо́бно къ немꙋ, и вра́на нощна́го, и лили́ка и и́вина, и порфꙋрїо́на, пелика́на, и ородїо́на, и харадрїо́на, и е́же подо́бна си́мъ, и вдо́да и но́щна нетопырѧ̀.