Bastet
The cat-headed goddess was named Bast. She is an Egyptian goddess.
Bast
Henet is the ancient Egyptian deity considered as the pelican-headed goddess.
The most commonly known one is the Egyptian goddess Bast or Bastet.
Sekhmet was a ancinet Egyptian lion headed goddess of war and protector of the pharaoh. There were no people named for her.
Sekhmet was the lion headed ancient Egyptian goddess who protected Ra/the pharaoh and meted out divine punishment to the enemies of the gods and of the pharaoh.
Kuk was the frog headed god who with the goddess Keket were the Ogdoad deities to represent darkness.
Sekhmet is a goddess in Egyptian mythology who is depicted as a lioness-headed deity. In "The Red Pyramid" by Rick Riordan, Sekhmet is mentioned as one of the powerful Egyptian gods and goddesses who play a role in the story. She is known as the goddess of war and is often associated with destruction and healing.
Egyptians thought a lot of animals were gods in disguise. Cats were revered greatly because of their grace, beauty, vermin control (what, you thought that didn't matter?), and the goddess Bast is a cat-headed... well, goddess.
bast
The Goddess Tefnut (tfnt in hieroglyphs) has no specific symbol in the way that other goddesses have. She is depicted either as a woman with a lioness' head or simply as a human woman; occasionally she appears as a lion-headed snake.The Egyptian religion included several other lion-headed goddesses, so you need to be able to read the text next to her to establish that it is Tefnut and not Sekhmet, Wadjet or one of the others.
Anubis was a jackal-headed god, not a goddess.