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Encyclopedia of what we have not on.


These are just some of them we don’t have time to get on. You can ask for prices and types. So if you want to know male or female, type or who and what I can tell you. Example in apparitions, these would show themselves on and off to you. They would be housebound spirits. Angels are various types that are with you when needed. It’s just a matter of asking and getting a price.


#### A

- Angels (Original): Celestial beings in Abrahamic religions, winged messengers of God, from guardians to warriors like Archangel Michael.

- Apparitions (Original): Ghostly figures appearing briefly, often tied to a location or event, sometimes replaying past moments.

- Alfar (Previous): Norse elven beings from Álfheim, tied to nature and magic, influencing human fate or fertility.

- Asanbosam (Previous): Akan (West African) vampiric creature with iron teeth and hooked feet, ambushing forest travelers.

- Astral Projection (Previous): Consciousness leaving the body to explore other planes, common in occult traditions.

- Aswang (Previous): Filipino shapeshifting monster, human by day, blood-sucking or viscera-eating by night.

- Adze: West African (Ewe) vampire-like spirit, appearing as a firefly to possess humans or drink blood, causing misfortune.

- Ahuizotl: Aztec water creature, dog-like with a hand-tipped tail, luring victims to drown in lakes or rivers.

- Aitvaras: Lithuanian household spirit, a rooster or dragon, bringing wealth but causing chaos if not appeased.

- Amarok: Inuit giant wolf, hunting alone in Arctic lore, punishing those who disrespect nature.


#### B

- Banshee (Original): Irish female spirit whose wail foretells death, appearing near the doomed.

- Bigfoot (Sasquatch) (Original): North American cryptid, a large, furry, ape-like creature, elusive in the Pacific Northwest.

- Baku (Previous): Japanese dream-eating, tapir-like creatures, consuming nightmares but dangerous if overfed.

- Barbegazi (Previous): Swiss/French Alpine gnomes with frosty beards, aiding winter travelers.

- Boggart (Previous): English household spirit causing chaos, banished by laughter or rituals.

- Bunyip (Previous): Australian Aboriginal water monster, seal-like or serpentine, devouring humans.

- Baba Yaga: Slavic witch living in a hut on chicken legs, aiding or devouring travelers based on their wit.

- Basilisk: European serpent-like creature, killing with a glance, hatched from a serpent’s egg by a rooster.

- Blemmyae: Headless humanoids from medieval lore, with faces on their chests, rumored to dwell in distant lands.

- Boto Encantado: Amazonian shapeshifting dolphin, becoming human to seduce or abduct people at night.


#### C

- Chupacabra (Original): Latin American cryptid, “goat-sucker,” draining livestock blood, spiky or canine-like.

- Curses (Original): Supernatural afflictions via rituals or objects, countered by specific rites.

- Cailleach (Previous): Scottish/Irish winter goddess, shaping landscapes, granting boons or curses.

- Cat Sith (Previous): Celtic fairy cat, stealing souls or blessing homes, tied to Samhain.

- Cockatrice (Previous): Rooster-serpent hybrid with a petrifying gaze, born from a rooster’s egg.

- Cynocephali (Previous): Dog-headed humanoids from medieval/Greek lore, seen as cursed or divine.

- Ceasg: Scottish mermaid-like creature with a salmon tail, granting wishes if captured but vengeful if harmed.

- Chimera: Greek monster with a lion’s head, goat’s body, and serpent’s tail, breathing fire and terrorizing lands.

- Clurichaun: Irish fairy, a drunken leprechaun cousin, guarding wine cellars but causing mischief if offended.

- Cretan Bull: Greek mythological beast, tamed by Hercules, tied to supernatural strength and divine tasks.


#### D

- Demons (Original): Malevolent entities, like fallen angels or Japanese oni, tied to possession or chaos.

- Djinn (Jinn) (Original): Islamic/Arabian smokeless fire beings, shapeshifting, granting wishes, good or evil.

- Doppelgänger (Previous): European spectral double, an omen of death or misfortune if seen.

- Draug (Previous): Norse undead sea spirits, luring sailors to doom or guarding treasures.

- Dryad (Previous): Greek tree spirits, bound to trees, cursing those who harm their forests.

- Duende (Previous): Spanish/Latin American goblin-like spirits, rewarding or pranking humans.

- Dahu: French Alpine cryptid, a goat-like creature with uneven legs for mountain slopes, possibly a folk tale hoax.

- Domovoi: Slavic household spirit, protecting homes but turning mischievous if neglected or disrespected.

- Dullahan: Irish headless horseman, carrying its head, a death omen riding a black horse with a whip of human spines.

- Dvergr: Norse dwarves, master craftsmen of magical items (e.g., Thor’s hammer), living underground.


#### E

- Elementals (Original): Spirits of earth, air, fire, or water, invoked in European occult traditions.

- Exorcism (Original): Rituals to expel malevolent spirits, using prayers or symbols in various cultures.

- Eidolon (Previous): Greek phantom or idealized spirit, deceiving or inspiring mortals.

- Eloko (Previous): Mongo (Central African) dwarf-like spirits with hypnotic bells, devouring lost humans.

- Erlking (Previous): Germanic forest spirit luring children to death with songs or illusions.

- Empusa (Previous): Greek shape-shifting demons, seducing and feeding on men for Hecate.

- Each Uisge: Scottish water horse, deadlier than kelpies, luring riders to drown and devour them.

- Enenra: Japanese smoke yokai, appearing in bonfires to those with pure hearts, elusive and ethereal.

- Erymanthian Boar: Greek monstrous boar, a divine challenge for Hercules, tied to supernatural strength.

- Ewah: Cherokee demon, driving victims mad with its gaze, linked to shapeshifting witches.


#### F

- Fairies (Original): Celtic/Germanic magical beings, benevolent or mischievous, in hidden realms.

- Familiars (Original): Animal-like entities aiding witches/sorcerers, acting as spies or helpers.

- Fenrir (Previous): Norse monstrous wolf, destined to kill Odin at Ragnarök, bound by magical chains.

- Fomorians (Previous): Irish demonic giants, opposing Tuatha Dé Danann, embodying chaos.

- Fetch (Previous): Irish/Scottish spectral double, signaling impending death.

- Fylgja (Previous): Norse guardian spirit, animal or human, tied to one’s fate or omens.

- Far darrig: Irish red-clad fairy, a prankster causing nightmares or leaving changelings.

- Faun: Roman nature spirits, half-human, half-goat, playful but seductive, tied to forests.

- Futakuchi-onna: Japanese yokai, a woman with a second mouth on her head, devouring food greedily.

- Fachan: Scottish one-legged, one-armed monster, guarding treasures with ferocious strength.


#### G

- Ghosts (Original): Spirits of the deceased, lingering in haunted places, benevolent or venge Óraleigh**: Irish trickster fairy, a small, red-clad man causing mischief but vulnerable to iron or salt.

- Golems (Original): Jewish animated clay figures, created via rituals, potentially uncontrollable.

- Gargoyle (Previous): Medieval stone creatures, alive as protectors or cursers of buildings.

- Ghoul (Previous): Middle Eastern flesh-eating creatures, haunting graveyards, shapeshifting to lure prey.

- Glaistig (Previous): Scottish half-woman, half-goat spirit, luring men or protecting livestock.

- Gurumapa (Previous): Nepalese ogre devouring naughty children, placated with offerings.

- Grindylow: English water demon, grabbing children near ponds with long fingers, tied to cautionary tales.

- Gwyllion: Welsh mountain spirits, hag-like, misleading travelers or haunting old houses.

- Gashadokuro: Japanese giant skeleton yokai, formed from starved soldiers’ bones, biting heads off wanderers.

- Gorgon: Greek mythological sisters (e.g., Medusa), with snake hair and petrifying gazes, tied to divine curses.


#### H

- Hauntings (Original): Supernatural spirit or energy manifestations, intelligent or residual.

- Hellhounds (Original): Underworld dogs with glowing eyes, guarding cemeteries or crossroads.

- Hantu (Previous): Malay/Indonesian ghosts, like the hantu penanggalan, a detached head with intestines.

- Harpy (Previous): Greek winged bird-women, stealing food or souls as divine punishment.

- Hodag (Previous): Wisconsin cryptid, spiky-backed, horned forest guardian or prankster.

- Huli Jing (Previous): Chinese fox spirits, shapeshifting, testing human morality.

- Hinkypunk: English will-o’-the-wisp variant, a one-legged creature luring travelers into bogs with a lantern.

- Hippocampus: Greek sea creature, half-horse, half-fish, pulling Poseidon’s chariot.

- Hyakume: Japanese yokai with a hundred eyes, haunting old buildings to spy or steal.

- Hecatoncheires: Greek three giants with fifty heads and a hundred arms, guarding Titans in Tartarus.


#### I

- Incubus/Succubus (Original): Demonic entities seducing humans in sleep, linked to sleep paralysis.

- Invisibility (Original): Ability of fairies or via magical cloaks, common in folklore.

- Ifrit (Previous): Islamic fiery djinn, cunning and rebellious unless magically bound.

- Imp (Previous): European small demons, serving witches, delighting in minor chaos.

- Iara (Previous): Brazilian Amazonian mermaid, luring men to drown with her song.

- Ignis Fatuus (Previous): European ghostly lights, leading travelers astray in swamps.

- Iku-Turso: Finnish sea monster, a tentacled beast causing storms or disease, tied to war gods.

- Ilomba: Lozi (Zambian) snake familiar, serving sorcerers but turning on them if neglected.

- Isonade: Japanese sea yokai, a shark-like creature hooking sailors with its barbed tail.

- Ixtab: Mayan goddess of suicide, a spectral figure guiding hanged souls to paradise.


#### J

- Jiangshi (Original): Chinese hopping vampires, feeding on life energy (qi), controlled by talismans.

- Jack-o’-lantern (Original): Irish spirit with a glowing pumpkin, warding off evil, tied to Stingy Jack.

- Jötunn (Previous): Norse giants, opposing gods, embodying elemental forces like frost.

- Jinmenju (Previous): Japanese yokai tree with human-faced fruits, laughing and cursed.

- Jumbie (Previous): Caribbean spirits of the dead, vengeful or protective, tied to families.

- Jurema (Previous): Brazilian spirit or plant entity, invoked via jurema tree for healing.

- Jengu: Sawa (Cameroon) water spirits, mermaid-like, granting fertility or safe passage.

- Jinnamuru: Aboriginal Australian spirit, a head with bat wings, attacking with stones or spit.

- Jorogumo: Japanese spider yokai, shapeshifting into a woman to lure men to her web.

- Jaud: Serbian vampire-like creature, born from stillborn babies, haunting families.


#### K

- Kappa (Original): Japanese water spirits, turtle-human hybrids, mischievous or deadly, appeased with cucumbers.

- Kitsune (Original): Japanese fox spirits, shapeshifting, serving Inari or tricking humans.

- Kelpie (Previous): Scottish water horse, luring riders to drown in rivers or lochs.

- Kobold (Previous): Germanic household/mine spirits, helpful but prankish if offended.

- Kuchisake-onna (Previous): Japanese yokai, mutilated-mouthed woman attacking after asking if she’s pretty.

- Kuntilanak (Previous): Indonesian ghost of a woman dead in childbirth, luring men with cries.

- Karkadann: Persian unicorn-like beast, fierce with a single horn, tamed only by virgins.

- Kupua: Hawaiian shapeshifting spirits, tied to nature or ancestors, aiding or tricking humans.

- Kushtaka: Tlingit (Alaskan) otter-like spirits, luring sailors to drown or saving lost travelers.

- Kamaitachi: Japanese weasel yokai, slicing victims with sickle-like claws in whirlwinds.


#### L

- Leprechauns (Original): Irish fairy cobblers, tricky with hidden gold, granting wishes if caught.

- Lycanthropy (Original): Transformation into werewolves, moon-triggered, cursed or bitten.

- Lamia (Previous): Greek child-eating monster, serpentine or half-human, preying on men.

- La Llorona (Previous): Mexican weeping ghost, seeking drowned children’s replacements by rivers.

- Leshy (Previous): Slavic forest spirit, protecting wildlife, misleading or aiding travelers.

- Lich (Previous): European undead sorcerer, immortal via soul-bound phylactery.

- Ladon: Greek dragon guarding the golden apples in the Hesperides’ garden, slain by Hercules.

- Liderc: Hungarian shapeshifting demon, appearing as a lover, animal, or light, draining victims’ life force.

- Lusca: Caribbean sea monster, half-shark, half-octopus, dragging ships into coral caves.

- Langsuyar: Malay vampire-like ghost, a woman dead in childbirth, with long hair and claws.


#### M

- Mermaids (Original): Aquatic beings with human upper bodies, fish tails, luring or aiding sailors.

- Mediums (Original): People communicating with spirits, channeling messages or conducting séances.

- Manticore (Previous): Persian lion-human-scorpion creature with venomous spines.

- Mothman (Previous): American winged cryptid, red-eyed, an omen of disaster from 1960s West Virginia.

- Moroi (Previous): Romanian living vampires, born with powers, distinct from strigoi.

- Myling (Previous): Scandinavian ghost children, haunting roadsides for burial or vengeance.

- Manananggal: Filipino vampire, splitting its body to fly with bat-like wings, eating hearts or fetuses.

- Mara: Germanic nightmare spirit, sitting on sleepers’ chests, causing bad dreams or suffocation.

- Mbói Tu’i: Guarani (Paraguayan) serpent-parrot creature, guarding rivers with a terrifying screech.

- Mokoi: Mbyá Guarani spirit, a forest hunter luring children to death with whistles.


#### N

- Necromancy (Original): Raising or communicating with the dead for divination or control.

- Nymphs (Original): Greek nature spirits tied to forests, rivers, or mountains, blessing or cursing.

- Naga (Previous): Hindu/Buddhist serpent beings, guarding treasures or sacred sites.

- Nixie (Previous): Germanic water spirits, luring humans to drown, shapeshifting into fish.

- Nuckelavee (Previous): Orcadian skinless horse-rider monster, spreading disease from the sea.

- Nuno (Previous): Filipino goblin-like spirits in anthills, cursing those who disturb them.

- Namazu: Japanese giant catfish yokai, causing earthquakes unless restrained by a god.

- Nure-onna: Japanese sea serpent with a woman’s head, drowning men or demanding their combs.

- Nandi Bear: East African cryptid, a bear-like predator with a sloping back, attacking livestock or humans.

- Näkki: Finnish water spirit, shapeshifting to lure children or women to drown in lakes.


#### O

- Oni (Original): Japanese demonic ogres with horns and fangs, tied to chaos or guarding hell.

- Oracles (Original): Ancient individuals/sites channeling divine prophecies, like Delphi.

- Ogbanje (Previous): Igbo spirit children, dying and reborn to cause family grief, broken by rituals.

- Ogre (Previous): European cannibalistic giants, human-like, in fairy tales like “Puss in Boots.”

- Oniwaban (Previous): Japanese ghostly spies, haunting castles for spectral lords.

- Ouphe (Previous): English fairy or goblin from Shakespearean lore, playing tricks.

- Orcus: Roman underworld god, sometimes a monstrous spirit punishing oath-breakers.

- Obake: Japanese shapeshifting yokai, from harmless to horrific, tied to ghost stories.

- Oilliphéist: Irish sea serpent, carving riverbeds or swallowing heroes in Celtic tales.

- Ogopogo: Canadian lake monster, a serpentine cryptid in Okanagan Lake, tied to Indigenous lore.


#### P

- Poltergeist (Original): Ghosts causing physical disturbances, tied to adolescents or psychokinetic energy.

- Psychic Phenomena (Original): Abilities like telepathy or clairvoyance, attributed to supernatural sources.

- Pegasus (Previous): Greek winged horse, born from Medusa’s blood, symbolizing inspiration.

- Peri (Previous): Persian benevolent winged spirits, protecting humans from evil.

- Pishacha (Previous): Hindu flesh-eating demons, haunting cremation grounds, causing madness.

- Puca (Previous): Irish shapeshifting spirit, horse or goat, bringing fortune or mischief.

- Patupaiarehe: Māori fairy-like spirits, pale and nocturnal, luring or aiding humans in forests.

- Penanggalan: Malay detached-head vampire, trailing intestines, feeding on pregnant women’s blood.

- Pontianak: Indonesian/Malay ghost of a woman dead in childbirth, haunting with cries or fragrances.

- Pukwudgie: Wampanoag (Native American) small, troll-like creatures, mischievous or deadly with poisoned arrows.


#### Q

- Questing Beast (Original): Arthurian chimeric monster with a serpent’s head, pursued by knights.

- Qilin (Original): Chinese unicorn-like creature, symbolizing prosperity, appearing during just rulers.

- Qareen (Previous): Islamic companion spirit, a djinn-like entity influencing human actions.

- Qutrub (Previous): Arabian werewolf-like creature, haunting desolate places, feeding on corpses.

- Qallupilluit (Previous): Inuit sea spirits, kidnapping children near icy waters.

- Quetzalcoatl (Previous): Aztec feathered serpent god, tied to wind and wisdom.

- Qasavara: Melanesian malevolent spirits, invisible and causing illness or chaos in villages.

- Qiqirn: Inuit dog-like spirit, causing seizures or fear, repelled by shouting its name.

- Qiongqi: Chinese mythical beast, a winged tiger, symbolizing chaos and punishing the virtuous.

- Qanemcit Amerssuatsiaq: Greenlandic Inuit sea spirit, a giantess dragging kayakers to her underwater lair.


#### R

- Revenant (Original): Animated corpses returning for vengeance or unfinished business.

- Runes (Original): Germanic/Norse magical symbols for divination, protection, or spells.

- Rusalka (Previous): Slavic water spirits, drowned women luring men to drown.

- Rakshasa (Previous): Hindu shape-shifting demons, often tiger-like, devouring humans.

- Roc (Previous): Middle Eastern giant bird, carrying elephants, in Arabian Nights.

- Rawhead (Previous): English bogeyman, skeletal with a bloody head, terrifying children.

- Rangda: Balinese demon queen, a witch leading evil spirits, battled by Barong in rituals.

- Raiju: Japanese lightning beast, wolf or dog-like, accompanying thunder gods, clawing trees.

- Runa: Amazonian forest spirit, shapeshifting to protect jungles or punish intruders.

- Redcap (Previous): Scottish goblin, staining its cap with victims’ blood, haunting ruins.


#### S

- Shapeshifters (Original): Beings like werewolves or kitsune, changing form via magic or curses.

- Sirens (Original): Greek bird-women or mermaids, luring sailors with enchanting songs.

- Selkie (Previous): Scottish seal-folk, shedding skins to become human, trapped if skins are stolen.

- Skinwalker (Previous): Navajo shapeshifting witches, taking animal forms to harm or spy.

- Spriggan (Previous): Cornish fairies, growing gigantic, guarding treasures or causing mischief.

- Strigoi (Previous): Romanian undead vampires, rising from graves to drink blood.

- Saci: Brazilian one-legged trickster spirit, smoking a pipe, granting wishes or causing chaos.

- Simurgh: Persian mythical bird, ancient and wise, aiding heroes with healing feathers.

- Sleipnir: Norse eight-legged horse, ridden by Odin, tied to supernatural speed and travel.

- Soucouyant: Caribbean vampire-witch, shedding her skin to fly as a fireball, sucking blood at night.


#### T

- Trolls (Original): Norse/Scandinavian monstrous beings, hostile or dim-witted, in mountains.

- Tulpas (Original): Tibetan thought-form beings, created via meditation, gaining autonomy.

- Tengu (Previous): Japanese bird-like yokai, warriors or tricksters, guarding mountains.

- Tikbalang (Previous): Filipino horse-headed humanoid, haunting forests, misleading travelers.

- Tsuchigumo (Previous): Japanese spider yokai, shapeshifting to deceive or attack.

- Taniwha (Previous): Māori dragon-like water spirits, protecting or threatening communities.

- Tarasque: French dragon-like monster, tamed by Saint Martha, tied to Christian folklore.

- Tchort: Slavic evil spirit, a black, dog-like demon tempting humans to sin.

- Tlaloc: Aztec rain god, sometimes a supernatural entity, demanding child sacrifices for fertility.

- Turehu: Māori fairy-like spirits, pale and musical, haunting forests or caves, sometimes kidnapping humans.


#### U

- Undead (Original): Animated deceased beings like zombies or vampires, driven by curses.

- Unicorns (Original): Horse-like creatures with a single horn, symbolizing purity.

- Udug (Previous): Mesopotamian evil spirits, causing disease, banished by priests.

- Umibōzu (Previous): Japanese sea yokai, a giant head capsizing ships if not appeased.

- Ushabti (Previous): Egyptian animated figurines, serving the dead in the afterlife.

- Urayuli (Previous): Alaskan Yup’ik hairy cryptid, kidnapping children in forests.

- Umm al-Ghaib: Arabian “Mother of the Unseen,” a djinn queen ruling hidden realms.

- Uwan: Japanese yokai with a terrifying voice, shouting “Uwan!” in abandoned places.

- Urcuchillay: Inca llama-like spirit, a constellation protecting herds and fertility.

- Utlunta: Cherokee stone-skinned woman, spearing disrespectful men with her sharp fingers.


#### V

- Vampires (Original): Undead blood-drinkers, repelled by garlic or sunlight, turning victims.

- Voodoo (Original): Afro-Caribbean religion with spirits (loa), curses, and zombies.

- Vetala (Previous): Indian undead spirits in corpses, haunting charnel grounds with riddles.

- Vila (Previous): Slavic fairy-like spirits, dancing in forests, blessing or cursing humans.

- Vrykolakas (Previous): Greek vampires, undead from improper burial, roaming at night.

- Vampiric Mist (Previous): European spectral mist draining life, sometimes a vampire’s form.

- Vampiric Fae: Celtic fairies like the baobhan sith, dancing with men to drain their blood.

- Vircolac: Romanian werewolf-vampire hybrid, cursed to roam and feed at night.

- Veles: Slavic underworld god, sometimes a horned spirit, tied to magic and cattle.

- Vodyanoi: Russian water spirit, drowning swimmers or demanding tribute from fishermen.


#### W

- Werewolves (Original): Humans transforming into wolves, moon-triggered, cursed or bitten.

- Witches (Original): Magic practitioners, demon-linked in Europe or healers elsewhere.

- Wendigo (Previous): Algonquian cannibalistic spirit, transforming humans via taboo acts.

- Will-o’-the-wisp (Previous): Ghostly lights luring travelers to danger in swamps.

- Wraith (Previous): European spectral entities, draining life or signaling death.

- Wyrm (Previous): Serpentine dragons guarding treasures or causing destruction.

- Wanyudo: Japanese yokai, a flaming wheel with a monk’s head, burning souls of the wicked.

- Wulver: Shetland (Scottish) wolf-headed humanoid, leaving fish for poor families, unlike werewolves.

- Wadjet: Egyptian cobra goddess, sometimes a supernatural protector of pharaohs.

- Wili: Slavic female spirits, dancing at night, luring men to exhaustion or death.


#### X

- Xana (Original): Asturian (Spanish) river fairies, guarding treasures or offering gifts.

- Xiangshi (Original): Chinese hopping vampires, feeding on qi, controlled by talismans.

- Xecotcovach (Previous): Mayan bird-demon, plucking eyes in underworld tales.

- Xtabay (Previous): Yucatec Mayan seductive spirit, luring men to death in forests.

- Xiuhcoatl (Previous): Aztec fire serpent, Huitzilopochtli’s weapon, symbolizing lightning.

- Xipe Totec (Previous): Aztec deity of renewal, with supernatural flayed-skin rituals.

- Xana del Riu: Asturian water nymph, singing to enchant or drown unwary men.

- Xolotl: Aztec dog-headed god, a psychopomp guiding souls, tied to lightning.

- Xiuhtecuhtli: Aztec fire god, sometimes a spirit of flame in ritual contexts.

- Xerxes’ Shades: Persian ghostly warriors, invoked in myths as lingering spirits of defeated armies.


#### Y

- Yeti (Original): Himalayan ape-like cryptid, “Abominable Snowman,” in Sherpa lore.

- Yokai (Original): Japanese supernatural beings, from mischievous tanuki to horrific kuchisake-onna.

- Yacuruna (Previous): Amazonian water spirits, ruling underwater cities, aiding or luring humans.

- Yowie (Previous): Australian hairy, ape-like cryptid, haunting outback regions.

- Yuki-onna (Previous): Japanese snow woman yokai, freezing or seducing men in blizzards.

- Yara-ma-yha-who (Previous): Aboriginal frog-like creature, swallowing and turning victims.

- Yenaldooshi: Navajo skinwalker variant, a witch shapeshifting to curse or harm.

- Yurei: Japanese ghosts, pale with long black hair, haunting due to unresolved emotions.

- Yatagarasu: Japanese three-legged crow, a divine guide for emperors, tied to sun myths.

- Yagim: Papuan forest spirit, invisible and causing illness or disorientation in jungles.


#### Z

- Zombies (Original): Reanimated corpses, mindless and hungry, from Haitian voodoo or viral lore.

- Zephyr Spirits (Original): Air/wind spirits, like Greek Zephyrus, supernatural in folklore.

- Zburător (Previous): Romanian winged man spirit, seducing women at night.

- Zmeu (Previous): Romanian dragon-like creature, abducting maidens or guarding treasures.

- Zār (Previous): Middle Eastern/North African possession spirits, exorcised through music.

- Zilant (Previous): Tatar winged serpent, guarding Kazan in Islamic/Slavic lore.

- Zorigami: Japanese yokai, a possessed clock, moving at night to scare households.

- Zduhać: Serbian spirit-warriors, leaving bodies to battle storms or evil spirits in dreams.

- Zhi Ren: Chinese paper effigy spirits, animated in rituals to serve or protect the living.

- Zonbi: Haitian voodoo undead, distinct from zombies, created by sorcerers for servitude.



 
 
 

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8 Comments


what is this post exactly again? I don't get notified of blog posts lol

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May the odds be ever in your favour DeeDee

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Umm al-Ghaib: Arabian "Mother of the Unseen,' a djinn queen ruling hidden realms. - now I wonder what these djinn are like and how they compare to the djinn born simultaneously with you and inside the dimension(s) of one's soul

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Wulver: Shetland (Scottish) wolf-headed humanoid, leaving fish for poor families, unlike werewolves.

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Wonder what it would be like to be acquainted with a benevolent or at least gain the respect of the the Dalaketnon like elf species those races really like their oppulence still wonder what would've happened to me if I did get whisked away to their domain since that event in the past a long time ago

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Wow it's WikiDeeDeeia (Wikipedia) warehouse of wisdom & wonders

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