Enum rpgstat::legendary::Legendary[][src]

pub enum Legendary {
Show 1417 variants ABaoAQu, Aatxe, Abaasy, Abada, Abaia, Abarimon, Abath, AburaSumashi, Acephali, Acheri, Achlis, AdarLlwchGwin, Adaro, Adhene, Adlet, Adroanzi, Adze, Aerico, AEsir, Afanc, Agni, Agathodaemon, Agloolik, Agogwe, Ahkiyyini, Ahuizotl, Ahura, Aigamuxa, Aigikampoi, Airavata, Aitu, Aitvaras, Ajatar, Akateko, Akhlut, Akka, Akki, Akkorokamui, Akuma, Akupara, AkurojinNoHi, Al, Ala, Alal, Alan, Alce, Aleya, Alicanto, Alicorn, Alkonost, Allocamelus, Almas, AlMiRaj, Aloja, AlomBagWinnosis, Alp, Alphyn, AlpLuachra, AlRakim, Alseid, Alu, Alux, Amaburakosagi, Amala, Amamehagi, Amanojaku, Amarok, Amarum, AmazakeBabaa, Amemasu, Ammit, Amoronagu, Amphiptere, Amphisbaena, Anak, Androsphinx, Angel, Anqa, AniHyuntikwalaski, Ankou, Anmo, Antaeus, Anubis, AnteroVipunen, Anzu, AoAo, Aobozu, Apkallu, Apsaras, Aqrabuamelu, ArdatLili, ArgusPanoptes, ArikuraNoBaba, Arimaspi, Arion, ArkanSonney, Asag, Asakku, Asanbosam, Asena, ASeneeKiWakw, AshiMagari, Asiman, Askefrue, AskWeeDaEed, Asobibi, Aspidochelone, Asrai, Astomi, Asura, Aswang, Atomy, AtoOiKozo, Atshen, Auloniad, Avalerion, AwaHonDo, Axex, Ayakashi, AyakashiNoAyashibi, Aziza, Azukiarai, Azukitogi, Azukibabaa, Ba, BabaYaga, Baccoo, Badalisc, Bagiennik, Bahamut, BaiZe, BaJiaoGui, Bak, BakeKujira, Bakeneko, Bakezori, Bakhtak, Baku, Bakunawa, Balaur, Baloz, Bannik, Banshee, BaobhanSith, Barbegazi, Bardha, Bardi, Barghest, BarJuchne, BarnacleGeese, Barong, Basajaun, BasCelik, Bashe, BasiliscoChilote, Basilisk, Bathala, Batibat, Batsu, Baubas, Baykok, BeastOfBrayRoad, BeanNighe, Behemoth, Bendigeidfran, Bennu, Berehynia, Bergrisar, Bergsra, BestialBeast, BetobetoSan, Bhuta, BiBlouk, Bies, Bigfoot, Binbogami, BishopFish, BiwaBokuboku, BlackAnnis, BlackDog, BlackShuck, Blafard, Blemmyae, BloodyBones, Bludnik, BlueCrow, Bluecap, Bodach, Bogeyman, Boggart, Boginki, Bogle, BoiTata, Bolla, Bonnacon, BooHag, Boobrie, Bozaloshtsh, Brag, Brownie, Broxa, Bucca, Bokkenrijders, Bugbear, Buggane, BugulNoz, Bukavac, Bunyip, BunnyMan, BushDaiDai, Byangoma, Bysen, Cabeiri, Cacus, Cadejo, Cailleach, Caipora, Caladrius, Calingi, Callitrix, CalydonianBoar, Calygreyhound, Camahueto, Cambion, Campe, Camulatz, Candileja, Canaima, Canotila, Caoineag, Chapa, Chareng, Capcaun, Carbuncle, Catoblepas, CatSidhe, Ceasg, CeffylDwr, Centaur, Centicore, Cerastes, Cerberus, Cercopes, Cericopithicus, CeryneianHind, Cetan, Cetus, Chakora, Chalkydri, Chamrosh, Chaneque, Changeling, Charybdis, Chenoo, Chepi, Cherufe, ChevalMallet, ChevalGauvin, Chibaiskweda, Chichevache, Chickcharney, Chimaera, Chindi, Chinthe, Chitauli, Chochinobake, Chol, Chollima, Chonchon, Choorile, Chromandi, Chrysaor, Chrysomallus, Chukwa, Chupacabra, Churel, Ciguapa, Cihuateteo, Cikavac, CinnamonBird, Cipactli, CireinCroin, Coblynau, Cockatrice, Cofgod, ColchisBull, ColoColo, CorycianNymphs, CretanBull, Crinaeae, Criosphinx, Crocotta, TheCuBird, Cuco, Cucuy, Cuegle, Cuelebre, Curupira, CuSith, CwnAnnwn, Cyclops, Cyhyraeth, Cynocephalus, Dactyl, Daemon, Dahu, Daidarabotchi, Daitengu, Daitya, Danava, Daphnaie, DatsueBa, DeadSeaApes, DedMoroz, DeerWoman, Deity, Demigod, Dhampir, DiaoSiGui, Dilong, Dip, DiPenates, Dipsa, Dirawong, DiSmaUndarJordi, Diwata, Djall, DobharChu, DoGakwHoWad, Dokkaebi, Dokkalfar, Dola, Domovoi, Doppelganger, Drac, Drakon, Drakaina, Dragon, DragonTurtle, Drangue, Draugr, Drekavac, DropBear, Drow, Drude, Druk, Dryad, Duende, Duergar, Dullahan, Duwende, Dvergr, Dvorovoi, Dwarf, Dybbuk, DzeeDzeeBonDa, Dzunukwa, EasterBunny, EasterBilby, EachUisge, EagleSpirit, EbuGogo, Echidna, Echeneis, Edimmu, Egbere, Eikthyrnir, Einherjar, Ekek, ElbowWitch, Eldjotnar, Eleionomae, Elemental, Elepaio, Elf, Eloko, Emere, Emim, Empusa, Encantado, EnchantedMoor, Enfield, Engkanto, Enko, Ent, Epimeliad, Erchitu, ErGui, Erinyes, Erlking, ErymanthianBoar, EthiopianPegasus, Etiainen, Ettin, Eurynomos, Ewah, Eerinis, Fachen, Fafnir, Fairy, Familiar, FarDarrig, Farfadet, Fates, Faun, FearGorta, FeatheredSerpent, FeiLian, Fenghuang, Fenodyree, Fenrir, Fetch, Fext, Finfolk, FirBolg, FireBird, Firedrake, FishMan, FlatwoodsMonster, Fomorian, ForestBull, Freybug, Fuath, Fucanglong, Funayurei, FuruUtsubo, FutakuchiOnna, Fylgja, Gaasyendietha, Gagana, Gaki, Gallu, Galtzagorriak, Gamayun, Gana, Gancanagh, Gandabherunda, Gandharva, Gargouille, Garkain, Garmr, Garuda, Gashadokuro, Gaueko, Geb, Ged, Gegenees, GeniusLoci, German, Geryon, GhillieDhu, Ghost, Ghoul, Giant, GiantAnimal, GichiAnamiEBizhiw, Gidim, Gigantes, Gigelorum, Girtablilu, Gjenganger, Glaistig, Glashtyn, Gnome, Goblin, Gog, GoldDiggingAnt, Golem, Gorgades, Gorgon, Goryo, Grassman, Gremlin, Griffin, Grigori, Grim, GrimReaper, Grindylow, Gualichu, GuardianAngel, GudElim, Guhin, GuiPo, GuiShu, Gulon, Gumiho, Gurangatch, Gurumapa, Gwyllgi, Gwyllion, Gyascutus, Gytrash, Gyuki, Habrok, Hadhayosh, Hades, Haetae, Hag, Haietlik, HaiUri, Hakutaku, Hakuturi, HalfElf, Haltija, Hamadryad, Hamingja, Hamsa, HanauEpe, HantuAir, HantuDemon, HantuRaya, Harionago, Harpy, Haugbui, Havsrå, Helloi, HeadlessHorseman, HeadlessMule, Hecatonchires, Heikegani, Heinzelmannchen, Helead, Hellhound, Heracles, Hercinia, Herensuge, Hesperides, Hidebehind, Hiderigami, Hieracosphinx, Hihi, Hiisi, Hippalectryon, Hippocamp, Hippogriff, Hippopodes, Hircocervus, Hitodama, HitotsumeKozo, Hob, Hobbididance, Hobgoblin, Hodag, Hokhokw, Hoko, Homa, HombreCaiman, HombreGato, Homunculus, Hoo, Hoopoe, HoopSnake, HornedSerpent, Hotoke, Houri, Hraesvelg, Hrímþursar, Huaychivo, HuginnAndMuninn, Huldufolk, Hulder, HuliJing, Huma, Humbaba, Hundun, Hupia, Hyakume, Hydra, Hydros, Hydrus, Hyosube, Hypnalis, Hudhud, Ishigaq, IslandSatyr, Isonade, IttanMomen, IwanaBozu, Jackalope, JackInIrons, JackOLantern, Jaculus, Jasconius, JasyJaterei, Jatayu, Jaud, Jenglot, Jengu, Jentil, Jenu, Jerff, JerseyDevil, Jian, Jiangshi, Jiaolong, Jibakurei, Jievaras, Jikininki, Jinn, JipijkaM, Jiufeng, JiuTouNiao, Jogah, Jormungandr, Jorogumo, Jotai, Jotunn, Jujak, Jumbee, Kabouter, Kachina, Kahaku, Kajsa, Kalakeyas, Kallikantzaroi, Kamaitachi, Kamatayan, Kami, Kamikiri, KanbariNyudo, KanglaSha, Kanbo, Kanedama, Kappa, Kapre, Karakoncolos, Karakura, KarasuTengu, Karkadann, Karkinos, Karura, Karzelek, KasaObake, Kasha, Kashanbo, KatawaGuruma, KatsuraOtoko, Katallan, Kaukas, KawaUso, KawaZaru, KeLets, Keelut, KeeWakw, Kekkai, Kelpie, Ker, KesaranPasaran, Keukegen, Keythong, Khyah, Kigatilik, Kholomodumo, Kijimunaa, Kijo, Kikimora, Killmoulis, Kinnara, KinU, Kirin, Kishi, Kitsune, KitsuneTsuki, Kiyohime, Klabautermann, Knocker, Knucker, Kobalos, Kobold, Kodama, Kofewalt, KoGok, Kokakucho, Komainu, KonakiJiji, KonohaTengu, KoroPokGuru, Korrigan, Kraken, Krasnoludek, Krasue, Krampus, KuarahyJara, Kubikajiri, KuchisakeOnna, KudaGitsune, Kudan, Kui, Kukudhi, Kukwes, Kulshedra, Kumakatok, Kumiho, Kun, Kupua, Kurabokko, KurageNoHinotama, Kurma, Kurupi, Kushtaka, KyeRyong, Kyourinrin, KyubiNoKitsune, Kyuketsuki, LaBarTu, LabbMu, Ladyidday, Ladon, Laelaps, Laestrygonians, Lakanica, LakeMonster, Lakhey, LaLlorona, Lamassu, LambtonWorm, Lamia, Lamiak, LaMojana, Lampades, Landvaettir, Langmeidong, Lares, LaSayona, LaTunda, LavaBear, LaukuDvasios, Lauma, Lavellan, LeananSidhe, Leanashe, Leimakids, Leokampoi, Leontophone, Leprechaun, Leszi, Leuce, Leucrota, Leviathan, Leyak, LibyanAegipanes, LibyanSatyr, Liderc, LightningBird, Likho, Lilin, Lilitu, Limnades, Lindworm, Ljosalfar, Ljubi, LlamhigynYDwr, LochNessMonster, Loki, LoLol, Long, Longana, LongMa, Loogaroo, LouCarcolh, LoupGarou, LovelandFrog, LubberFiend, Luduan, Lugat, Luison, Lusca, Lutin, Lyngbakr, Lynx, MaaAlused, Machlyes, Macrocephali, MadamKoiKoi, Madremonte, Maero, Magog, MahaPudma, Mairu, MajasGari, Majitu, Makara, MakuraGaeshi, MalltYNos, MamiWata, Manananggal, Mandi, Mandrake, Manes, Mannegishi, Manticore, Mapinguari, Mara, Marabbecca, Mareikura, MaresOfDiomedes, Marid, Marmennill, MaroDeives, MaskiMonGweZoOs, Matagot, Matsya, Mayura, Mazzikin, MboiTuI, Mbwiri, Medusa, MelekTaus, Meliae, Melusine, Menehune, Menninkainen, Merlion, Mermaid, Merman, Merlin, Merrow, MeteeKolenOl, Mimi, MinkaBird, Minokawa, Minotaur, Mishibizhiw, MisiGinebig, MisiKinepikw, Mizuchi, Mogwai, Mohan, MokeleMbembe, Mokoi, Mokorea, Monai, Monocerus, MonoGrande, Monopod, MooinjerVeggey, Mora, Morgens, MorinjiNoOkama, Mormolykeia, Moroi, MossPeople, Mothman, Mugwump, Mujina, Muldjewangk, Multo, Mummy, MumaPadurii, MungoonGali, Muscaliet, Muse, Mushusshu, Musimon, Myling, Myrmecoleon, Nachzehrer, Naga, NagaFireballs, Nagual, Naiad, Nakki, Namahage, Namazu, NandoBaba, NangTakian, NanomKeeaPoDa, Napaeae, Narasimha, Narecnitsi, Nariphon, Nargun, Nasnas, Nav, Nawao, NDamKenoWet, Neptune, Neck, Negret, Nekomata, Nekomusume, NemeanLion, Nephilim, Nereid, Ngen, Nguruvilu, Nian, Nightmarchers, Nikusui, Nimerigar, Ningyo, NinkiNanka, Nisse, Niohoggr, Nivatakavachas, Nix, Nobusuma, Nocnitsa, NopperaBo, Nozuchi, Nuckelavee, Nue, NuGui, Nukekubi, NukuMaiTore, Nuli, Numen, Nuno, Nuppeppo, Nurarihyon, NureOnna, Nurikabe, NyamiNyami, Nykstukas, Nymph, Obake, Obariyon, Obayifo, Obia, Oceanid, Odei, Odin, Odmience, Og, Ogopogo, Ogun, Ogre, Oiwa, Ojancanu, Okiku, Okubi, OkuriInu, OleHigue, Omukade, Oni, Onibi, Onmoraki, Onocentaur, Onoskelis, Onryo, Onza, OozlumBird, Ophiotaurus, Opinicus, OrangBunian, OrangMinyak, Ordog, Oread, Ork, Orobas, OrphanBird, Orthrus, Osiris, Oshun, Otso, Ouroboros, Ovinnik, Owlman, PaasselkaDevils, Pamola, Panes, Pandi, Panis, Panlong, Panotti, Panther, Parandrus, Pard, Pardalokampoi, Patagon, Patasola, Patupairehe, Pech, Pegaeae, Pegasus, Pegacorn, Pelesit, Peluda, Penanggalan, Peng, Penghou, Peri, Peryton, Pesanta, Peuchen, PhiTaiHong, Phoenix, Piasa, Piatek, PictishBeast, Pillan, Plagg, PimSkwaWagenOwad, Piru, Pishacha, Pishtaco, PitaSkog, Pixie, Pixiu, PiYao, Plakavac, PokWejeeMen, Polevik, PolloMaligno, Polong, Poltergeist, Pombero, Ponaturi, Pontianak, PopeLickMonster, Poukai, Preta, Pricolici, Psoglav, Psotnik, Psychai, Psychopomp, Puca, Puki, Puck, Putz, Pugot, Puk, Pukis, Puckwudgie, Pygmy, Pyrausta, Python, Qalupalik, Qilin, Qiqirn, Qliphoth, QuestingBeast, Quetzalcoatl, Quinotaur, Ra, Rabisu, Radande, Ragana, Raiju, RainBird, RainbowCrow, RainbowFish, RainbowSerpent, Rakshasa, Ramidreju, Rarog, RavenMocker, RavenSpirit, Ratatoskr, RaystownRay, Redcap, ReEm, Reichsadler, Rephaite, ReptilianHumanoid, Revenant, Roc, Rokurokubi, Rompo, Rong, Rougarou, Rusalka, Ryu, Saci, Sagari, Sakabashira, Salamander, Samebito, Samodiva, Sampati, Sandman, Sango, Santelmo, SantaClaus, Sanziana, Sarimanok, Sarngika, Sarugami, Satori, Satan, Satyr, Satyrus, SazaeOni, Sceadugenga, Scitalis, ScorpionMan, Scylla, SeaBee, SeaLion, SeaMonk, SeaMonster, SeaSerpent, SeaWyvern, Seko, Selkie, SenpokuKanpoku, Seps, Serpent, Serpopard, Shachihoko, Shade, ShadowPeople, Shahbaz, Shaitan, ShangYang, Shedim, Shedu, Shellycoat, Shen, Shenlong, Shibaten, Shikigami, ShikiOji, Shikome, Shinigami, ShiroBozu, Shirouneri, Shiryo, Shisa, Shishi, Shojo, Shokera, Shtriga, ShuiGui, ShugMonkey, Shunoban, ShutenDoji, Sídhe, Sigbin, Sileni, Simargl, Simurgh, Singa, SintHolo, Siren, Sirin, Sirrush, Sisiutl, SiTeCah, Sjora, Sjovaettir, SkinWalker, Skogsra, Skoll, Skookum, Skeleton, Skrzak, SkyWomen, Sleipnir, Sluagh, SodehikiKozo, Sogenbi, Soragami, SorakiGaeshi, Sorobanbozu, Sotangitsune, Soucouyant, Spearfinger, Spectre, Sphinx, Spiridus, Spirit, Spriggan, Sprite, Squonk, Stihi, Strigoi, Strix, Struthopodes, Strzyga, Stuhac, StymphalianBird, Suangi, Succubus, Sudice, SunakakeBaba, Sunekosuri, Surma, Suzaku, Svaoilfari, Svartalfar, Swallower, SwanMaiden, Sylph, Sylvan, Syrbotae, Syrictae, Tachash, Tailypo, Taimatsumaru, Takam, TakaOnna, Talos, Tangie, Taniwha, Tantankororin, Tanuki, TaotaoMona, Taotie, Tapairu, Tarasque, Tartalo, Tartaruchi, TatamiTataki, Tatzelwurm, Tatsu, Taurokampoi, Tavara, TejuJagua, Tecumbalam, Tengu, Tennin, TeNoMe, Tepegoz, TerribleMonster, TeumessianFox, Theriocephalus, ThreeLeggedBird, Thunderbird, Thor, Tiangou, Tianlong, Tibicena, TiddyMun, Tigmamanukan, Tigris, Tikbalang, Tikoloshe, Timingila, Tipua, Titan, Tiyanak, Tizheruk, Tlahuelpuchi, TofuKozo, ToireNoHanakosan, Tomte, Topielec, Totetsu, Toyol, Trasgo, Trauco, Trenti, Trickster, Tripurasura, Tritons, Troll, Trow, TsiNoo, Tsuchigumo, Tsuchinoko, Tsukumogami, TsulKalu, TsuraraOnna, TsurubeOtoshi, TugarinZmeyevich, TylwythTeg, Tupilaq, Turehu, Turst, Turul, Tyger, Typhon, Tzitzimitl, Ubume, UchekLangmeidong, UmaNoAshi, Umibozu, UmiNyobo, Undead, UnderwaterPanther, Undine, Unhcegila, Unicorn, Unktehi, Unktehila, Upinis, Urayuli, Urias, Urmahlullu, UshiOni, Utukku, Uwan, Vadatajs, Vahana, Vaibhavi, Valkyrie, Valva, Valravn, Vampire, Vanara, Vantoase, Varaha, Varcolac, Vardoger, Vedrfolnir, Veli, VeriSelen, Vetala, Víbria, Vielfras, Vila, Vilkacis, Virunas, VisionSerpent, Vídopnir, Vodyanoy, Vrykolakas, Vaettir, Waldgeist, WanaGamesAk, Wani, Wanyudo, WarakNgendog, Warg, Warlock, WassanMonGaneehlaAk, WaterMonkey, WaterSprite, WatiKutjara, WaWonDeeAMegw, WeisseFrauen, Wekufe, Wendigo, Wentshukumishiteu, Werecat, Werehyena, Werewolf, WhiteLady, Whowie, WildMan, WillOTheWisp, WirryCow, Witch, WitteWieven, Wolpertinger, Wondjina, Wraith, Wulver, WuTouGui, Wyrm, Wyvern, Xana, Xanthus, Xecotcovach, Xelhua, Xiao, XingTian, Xiuhcoatl, Xhindi, Yacumama, Yacuruna, Yadokai, YagyoSan, Yaksha, Yakshi, Yakshini, YakubyoGami, Yale, Yazhi, YalleryBrown, Yama, YamaBiko, YamaBito, YamaChichi, YamaInu, YamaOtoko, YamataNoOrochi, YamaUba, YamaWaro, Yanari, Yaoguai, YaraMaYhaWho, Yatagarasu, YatoNoKami, YethHound, Yeti, Yilbegan, Yobuko, Yokai, YomotsuShikome, Yong, Yosei, Yosuzume, YouHunYeGui, Yowie, Ypotryll, YuanGui, Yukinko, YukiOnna, Yurei, Yuxa, Zahhak, Zaltys, Zamzummim, ZanaEMalit, Zână, ZashikiWarashi, Zburator, Zduhac, Zeus, ZennyoRyuo, ZharPtitsa, Zhulong, ZhuQue, Ziburinis, Zilant, Zin, Ziz, Zlatorog, Zmeu, Zmiy, Zombie, Zorigami, Zuijin, ZunberaBo,
}

Variants

ABaoAQu

(Malay) – Entity that lives in the Tower of Victory in Chitor.

Aatxe

(Basque) – Bull spirit.

Abaasy

(Yakuts) – Iron-toothed demons.

Abada

(African) – Unicorn that inhabits the African Congo.

Abaia

(Tatar) – Forest spirit. (Melanesia) – Huge magical eel.

Abarimon

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Savage humanoid with backward feet.

Abath

(Malay) – One-horned animal.

AburaSumashi

(Japanese) – Creature from a mountain pass in Kumamoto Prefecture.

Acephali

(Greek) – Headless humanoids.

Acheri

(Mitologia Hindu) – Disease-bringing ghost.

Achlis

(Roman) – Curious elk.

AdarLlwchGwin

(Welsh) – Giant birds that understand human languages.

Adaro

(Solomon Islands) – Malevolent merfolk.

Adhene

(Manx) – Nature spirit.

Adlet

(Inuit) – Vampiric dog-human hybrid

Adroanzi

(Lugbara) – Nature spirit.

Adze

(Ewe people) – African vampiric-forest being.

Aerico

(Greek) – Disease demon.

AEsir

(Norse) – Norse deities.

Afanc

(Welsh) – Lake monster (exact lake varies by story).

Agni

(Hindu) – God of fire and sacrifices.

Agathodaemon

(Greek) – Spirit of vinefields and grainfields.

Agloolik

(Inuit) – Ice spirit that aids hunters and fishermen.

Agogwe

(East Africa) – Small, ape-like humanoid.

Ahkiyyini

(Inuit) – Animated skeleton that causes shipwrecks.

Ahuizotl

(Aztec) – Anthropophagous dog-monkey hybrid.

Ahura

(Zoroastrianism) – Zoroastrian spirits.

Aigamuxa

(Khoikhoi) – Anthropophagous humanoid with eyes in its instep.

Aigikampoi

(Etruscan) – Fish-tailed goat.

Airavata

(Hindu) – Divine elephant.

Aitu

(Polynesian) – Malevolent spirits or demons.

Aitvaras

(Lithuanian) – Household spirit.

Ajatar

(Finnish) – Dragon/snake female spirit, is said to spread diseases

Akateko

(Japanese) – Tree-dwelling monster.

Akhlut

(Inuit) – Orca-wolf shapeshifter.

Akka

(Finnish) – Female spirits or minor goddesses.

Akki

(Japanese) – Large, grotesque humanoid.

Akkorokamui

(Ainu) – Sea monster.

Akuma

(Japanese) – Evil spirit or devil

Akupara

(Hindu) – Giant turtle that supports the world.

AkurojinNoHi

(Japanese) – Ghostly flame which causes disease.

Al

(Armenian and Persian) – Spirit that steals unborn babies and livers from pregnant women.

Ala

(Slavic) – Bad weather demon.

Alal

(Chaldean) – Queen of the full moon.

Alan

(Philippine) – Winged humanoid that steals reproductive waste to make children.

Alce

(Heraldic) – Wingless griffin.

Aleya

(Bengali) – Spirit of a dead fisherman.

Alicanto

(Chilean) – Bird that eats gold and silver.

Alicorn

(Bestiario medieval) – Winged unicorn.

Alkonost

(Slavic) – Angelic bird with human head and breasts.

Allocamelus

(Heraldic) – Ass-camel hybrid.

Almas

(Mongolian) – Savage humanoid.

AlMiRaj

(Islamic) – One-horned rabbit.

Aloja

(Catalan) – Female water spirit.

AlomBagWinnosis

(Abenaki) – Little people and tricksters.

Alp

(German) – Male night-demon.

Alphyn

(Heraldic) – Lion-like creature, sometimes with dragon or goat forelegs.

AlpLuachra

(Irish) – Parasitic fairy.

AlRakim

(Islamic) – Guard dog of the Seven Sleepers.

Alseid

(Greek) – Grove nymph.

Alu

(Assyrian) – Leprous demon.

Alux

(Mayan) – Little people.

Amaburakosagi

(Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from Shikoku.

Amala

(Tsimshian) – Giant who holds up the world.

Amamehagi

(Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from Hokuriku.

Amanojaku

(Japanese) – Small demon.

Amarok

(Inuit) – Giant wolf.

Amarum

(Quechua) – Water boa spirit.

AmazakeBabaa

(Japanese) – Disease-causing hag.

Amemasu

(Ainu) – Lake monster.

Ammit

(Ancient Egyptian) – Female demon who was part lion, hippopotamus and crocodile and devoured the souls of the wicked.

Amoronagu

(Japanese) – Tennyo from the island of Amami Ōshima.

Amphiptere

(Heraldic) – Winged serpent.

Amphisbaena

(Greek) – Serpent with a head at each end.

Anak

(Jewish) – Giant.

Androsphinx

(Ancient Egyptian) – Human-headed sphinx.

Angel

(mainly Christian, Jewish, Islamic traditions) – Divine beings of Heaven who act as mediators between God and humans; the counterparts of Demons.

Anqa

(Arabian) – Legendary Huge Satanic Eagle with Human Face. sometimes can resurrect herself like phoenix did.

AniHyuntikwalaski

(Cherokee) – Lightning spirit.

Ankou

(French) – Skeletal grave watcher with a lantern and scythe.

Anmo

(Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from Iwate Prefecture.

Antaeus

(Greek) – Giant who was extremely strong as long as he remained in contact with the ground.

Anubis

(Ancient Egyptian) – God of the Underworld

AnteroVipunen

(Finnish) – Subterranean giant.

Anzu

(Sumerian) – Divine storm bird

AoAo

(Guaraní) – Anthropophagous peccary or sheep.

Aobozu

(Japanese) – Blue monk who kidnaps children.

Apkallu

(Sumerian) – Fish-human hybrid that attends the god Enki.

Apsaras

(Buddhist and Hindu) – Female cloud spirit.

Aqrabuamelu

(Akkadian) – Human-scorpion hybrid.

ArdatLili

(Akkadian) – Disease demon.

ArgusPanoptes

(Greek) – Hundred-eyed giant.

ArikuraNoBaba

(Japanese) – Old woman with magical powers.

Arimaspi

(Greek) – One-eyed humanoid.

Arion

(Greek) – Swift green-maned talking horse.

ArkanSonney

(Manx) – Fairy hedgehog.

Asag

(Sumerian) – Hideous rock demon.

Asakku

(Sumerian) – Demon.

Asanbosam

(West Africa) – Iron-toothed vampire.

Asena

(Turkic) – Blue-maned wolf.

ASeneeKiWakw

(Abenaki) – Stone giant.

AshiMagari

(Japanese) – Invisible tendril that impedes movement.

Asiman

(Dahomey) – Vampiric possession spirit.

Askefrue

(Germanic) – Female tree spirit.

AskWeeDaEed

(Abenaki) – Fire elemental and spectral fire.

Asobibi

(Japanese) – Spectral fire from Kōchi Prefecture.

Aspidochelone

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Island-sized whale or sea turtle.

Asrai

(English) – Water spirit.

Astomi

(Greek) – Humanoid sustained by pleasant smells instead of food.

Asura

(Hindu) – Hindu malevolent divinities.

Aswang

(Philippine) – Carrion-eating humanoid.

Atomy

(English) – Surprisingly small creature.

AtoOiKozo

(Japanese) – Invisible spirit that follows people.

Atshen

(Inuit) – Anthropophagous spirit.

Auloniad

(Greek) – Pasture nymph.

Avalerion

(Medieval Bestiary) – King of the birds.

AwaHonDo

(Abenaki) – Insect spirit.

Axex

(Ancient Egyptian) – Falcon-lion hybrid.

Ayakashi

(Japanese) – Sea serpent that travels over boats in an arc while dripping oil.

AyakashiNoAyashibi

(Japanese) – Spectral fire from Ishikawa Prefecture.

Aziza

(Dahomey) – Little people that help hunters.

Azukiarai

(Japanese) – Spirit that washes azuki beans along riversides.

Azukitogi

(Japanese) – Spirit that washes azuki beans along riversides.

Azukibabaa

(Japanese) – Bean-grinding hag who devours people.

Ba

(Egyptian) – Soul of the deceased, depicted as a bird or a human-headed bird

BabaYaga

(Slavic) – Forest spirit and hag

Baccoo

(Guyanese/Surinamese) – Malevolent little people

Badalisc

(Italian) – Goat-like creature from the southern central Alps

Bagiennik

(Slavic) – Malevolent water spirit

Bahamut

(Arabian) – Giant fish

BaiZe

(Chinese) – Talking beast which handed down knowledge on harmful spirits

BaJiaoGui

(Chinese) – Banana tree spirit

Bak

(Indian) - Assamese shape-shifting aqueous creature

BakeKujira

(Japanese) – Ghostly whale skeleton that drifts along the coastline of Shimane Prefecture

Bakeneko

(Japanese) – Magical cat

Bakezori

(Japanese) – Animated straw sandal

Bakhtak

(Iranian) – Night demon

Baku

(Japanese) – Dream-devouring, tapir-like creature

Bakunawa

(Philippine) – Sea serpent that causes eclipses

Balaur

(Romanian) – Multi-headed dragon

Baloz

(Albanian) – Sea monster

Bannik

(Slavic) – Bathhouse spirit

Banshee

(Irish) – Screaming death spirit

BaobhanSith

(Celtic Mythology) – Beautiful vampiric seductresses who prey on young travelers

Barbegazi

(Swiss) – Dwarf with giant, snowshoe-like feet

Bardha

(Albanian) – Mountain spirit

Bardi

(Trabzon) – Shapechanging death spirit

Barghest

Yorkshire black dog

BarJuchne

(Jewish) – Gigantic bird

BarnacleGeese

(Medieval folklore) – Geese which hatch from barnacles

Barong

(Balinese) – Tutelary spirit

Basajaun

(Basque) – Ancestral, megalith-building race

BasCelik

(Serbian) – Powerful, evil winged man whose soul is not held by his body and can be subdued only by causing him to suffer dehydration

Bashe

(Chinese) – Elephant-swallowing serpent

BasiliscoChilote

(Chilota) – Chicken-serpent hybrid

Basilisk

(Italian) – Multi-limbed, venomous lizard

Bathala

(Philippine) – Primordial god of creation

Batibat

(Philippine) – Female night-demon

Batsu

(Chinese) – Drought spirit

Baubas

(Lithuanian) – Malevolent spirit

Baykok

(Ojibwa) – Flying skeleton

BeastOfBrayRoad

(American Folklore) – Werewolf

BeanNighe

(Irish) – Death spirit; a type of Banshee/Bean Sídhe)

Behemoth

(Jewish) – Massive beast, possibly like a dinosaur

Bendigeidfran

(Welsh) – Giant king

Bennu

(Egyptian) – Heron-like, regenerative bird, equivalent to (or inspiration for) the Phoenix

Berehynia

(Slavic) – Water spirit

Bergrisar

(Norse) – Mountain giants who live alongside the Hrimthursar (lit. “Rime-Giants”) in Jotunheim

Bergsra

(Norse) – Mountain spirit

BestialBeast

(Brazilian) – Centauroid specter

BetobetoSan

(Japanese) – Invisible spirit which follows people at night, making the sound of footsteps

Bhuta

(Buddhist and Hindu) – Ghost of someone killed by execution or suicide

BiBlouk

(Khoikhoi) – Female, cannibalistic, partially invisible monster

Bies

(Slavic) – Demon

Bigfoot

(American Folklore) – Forest-dwelling hominid cryptid.

Binbogami

(Japanese) – Spirit of poverty

BishopFish

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Fish-like humanoid

BiwaBokuboku

(Japanese) – Animated biwa

BlackAnnis

(English) – Blue-faced hag

BlackDog

(British) – Canine death spirit

BlackShuck

Norfolk, Essex, and Suffolk black dog

Blafard

Imaginary creature from the early United States of America

Blemmyae

(Medieval Bestiary) – Headless humanoid with face in torso

BloodyBones

(Irish) – Water bogeyman

Bludnik

(Slavic) – Mischievous gnome

BlueCrow

(Brazilian) – Giant amazonian bird

Bluecap

(English) – Mine-dwelling fairy

Bodach

(Scottish) – Malevolent spirit

Bogeyman

(English) – Malevolent spirit

Boggart

(English) – Malevolent household spirit

Boginki

(Slavic) – Nature spirit

Bogle

(Scottish) – Malevolent spirit

BoiTata

(Brazilian) – Giant snake

Bolla

(Albanian) – Dragon

Bonnacon

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Bull-horse hybrid with flaming dung

BooHag

(American Folklore) – Vampire-like creature that steals energy from sleeping victims

Boobrie

(Scottish) – Roaring water bird

Bozaloshtsh

(Slavic) – Death spirit

Brag

(English) – Malevolent water horse

Brownie

(English and Scottish) – Benevolent household spirit

Broxa

(Jewish) – Nocturnal bird that drains goats of their milk

Bucca

(Cornish) – Male sea-spirit, a merman, that inhabited mines and coastal communities as a hobgoblin during storms

Bokkenrijders

(Dutch) – Ghosts/devils riding flying goats; co-opted by bandits to instil fear during raids

Bugbear

(English) – Bearlike goblin

Buggane

(Manx) – Ogre-like humanoid

BugulNoz

(Celtic) – Extremely ugly, but kind, forest spirit

Bukavac

(Serbia) – Six-legged lake monster

Bunyip

(Australian Aboriginal) – Horse-walrus hybrid lake monster

BunnyMan

(American Folklore) West Virginia Urban Legend – Spirit/Maniac that wears a bunny costume and wields an axe

BushDaiDai

(Guyanese) – Spirit that seduces and kills men

Byangoma

(Bengali) – Fortune-telling birds

Bysen

(Scandinavian) – Diminutive forest spirit

Cabeiri

(Greek) – Smith and wine spirit

Cacus

(Roman) – Fire-breathing giant

Cadejo

(Central America) – Cow-sized dog-goat hybrid

Cailleach

(Scottish) – Divine creator and weather deity hag

Caipora

(Tupi) – Fox-human hybrid and nature spirit

Caladrius

(Medieval Bestiary) – White bird that can foretell if a sick person will recover or die

Calingi

(Medieval Bestiary) – Humanoid with an eight-year lifespan

Callitrix

(Medieval Bestiary) – Apes who always bear twins, one the mother loves, the other it hates

CalydonianBoar

(Greek) – Giant, chthonic boar

Calygreyhound

(Heraldic) – Wildcat-deer/antelope-eagle-ox-lion hybrid :>

Camahueto

(Chilota) – One-horned calf

Cambion

(Medieval folklore) – Offspring of a human and an incubus or succubus

Campe

(Greek) – Dragon-human-scorpion hybrid

Camulatz

(Mayan) – Bird that ate the heads of the first men

Candileja

(Colombian) – Spectral, fiery hag

Canaima

(Guyanese) – Were-jaguar

Canotila

(Lakota) – Little people and tree spirits

Caoineag

(Scottish) – Death spirit (a particular type of Banshee/Bean Sídhe)

Chapa

(Lakota) – Beaver spirit

Chareng

(Manipuri)-Semi-hornbill, semi-human creature

Capcaun

(Romanian) – Large, monstrous humanoid

Carbuncle

(Latin America) – Small creature with a jewel on its head

Catoblepas

(Medieval Bestiary) – Scaled buffalo-hog hybrid

CatSidhe

(Scottish) – Fairy cat

Ceasg

(Scottish) — Benevolent Scottish mermaids

CeffylDwr

(Welsh) – Malevolent water horse

Centaur

(Greek) – Human-horse hybrid

Centicore

(Indian) – Horse-Antelope-Lion-Bear hybrid

Cerastes

(Greek) – Extremely flexible, horned snake

Cerberus

(Greek) – Three-headed dog that guards the entrance to the underworld

Cercopes

(Greek) – Mischievous forest spirit

Cericopithicus

(Medieval Bestiary) – Apes who always bear twins, one the mother loves, the other it hates

CeryneianHind

(Greek) – Hind with golden antlers and bronze or brass hooves

Cetan

(Lakota) – Hawk spirit

Cetus

(Greek) The Cetus was variously described as a sea monster or sea serpent. Other versions describe Cetus as a monster with the head of a boar or a greyhound and the body of a whale or dolphin, and a divided, fan-like tail. Cetus was said to be a colossal beast the size of a ship, its skull alone measuring 40 feet (12.2 meters) in length, its spines being a cubit in thickness, and its skeleton taller at the shoulder than an elephant.

Chakora

(Hindu) – Lunar bird

Chalkydri

(Apocryphal writings) – Angelic birds

Chamrosh

(Persian) – Dog-bird hybrid

Chaneque

(Aztec) – Little people and nature spirits

Changeling

(European) – Humanoid child (fairy, elf, troll, etc.) substituted for a kidnapped human child

Charybdis

(Greek) – Sea monster in the form of a giant mouth

Chenoo

(Mi’kmaq/Algonquian) – Giant, human-eating ice monsters; former humans who either committed terrible crime(s) or were possessed by evil spirits, turning their hearts to ice

Chepi

(Narragansett) – Ancestral spirit that instructs tribe members

Cherufe

(Mapuche) – Volcano-dwelling monster

ChevalMallet

(French) – Evil horse who runs away with travelers

ChevalGauvin

(French) – Evil horse who drowns riders, similar to kelpie

Chibaiskweda

(Abenaki) – Ghost of an improperly buried person

Chichevache

Human-faced cow that feeds on good women

Chickcharney

(Bahamian) – Bird-mammal hybrid

Chimaera

(Greek) – Lion-goat-snake hybrid

Chindi

(Navajo) – Vengeful ghost that causes dust devils

Chinthe

(Burmese) – Temple-guarding feline, similar to Chinese Shi and Japanese Shisa

Chitauli

(Zulu) – Human-lizard hybrid

Chochinobake

(Japanese) – Animated paper lantern

Chol

(Biblical mythology) – Regenerative bird

Chollima

(Korean) – Supernaturally fast horse

Chonchon

(Mapuche) – Disembodied, flying head

Choorile

(Guyanese) – Ghost of a woman that died in childbirth

Chromandi

(Medieval Bestiary) – Hairy savage with dog teeth

Chrysaor

(Greek) – The giant son of the gorgon Medusa.

Chrysomallus

(Greek mythology) – Golden winged ram

Chukwa

(Hindu) – Giant turtle that supports the world

Chupacabra

(Latin America) – Cryptid beast named for its habit of sucking the blood of livestock

Churel

(Hindu) – Vampiric, female ghost

Ciguapa

(Dominican Republic) – Malevolent seductress

Cihuateteo

(Aztec) – Ghost of women that died in childbirth

Cikavac

(Serbian) – Bird that serves its owner

CinnamonBird

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Giant bird that makes its nest out of cinnamon

Cipactli

(Aztec) – Sea monster, crocodile-fish hybrid

CireinCroin

(Scottish) – Sea serpent

Coblynau

(Welsh) – Little people and mine spirits

Cockatrice

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Chicken-lizard hybrid

Cofgod

(English) – Cove god

ColchisBull

(Greek) – Bronze-hoofed bulls

ColoColo

(Mapuche) – Rat-bird hybrid that can shapeshift into a serpent

CorycianNymphs

(Greek) – Nymph of the Corycian Cave

CretanBull

(Greek) – Monstrous bull

Crinaeae

(Greek) – Fountain nymph

Criosphinx

(Ancient Egypt) – Ram-headed sphinx

Crocotta

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Monstrous dog-wolf

TheCuBird

(Mexican) – El Pájaro Cu; a bird.

Cuco

(Latin America) – Bogeyman

Cucuy

(Latin America) – Malevolent spirit

Cuegle

(Cantabrian) – Monstrous, three-armed humanoid

Cuelebre

(Asturian and Cantabrian) – Dragon

Curupira

(Tupi) – Nature spirit

CuSith

(Scottish) – Gigantic fairy dog

CwnAnnwn

(Welsh) – Underworld hunting dog

Cyclops

(Greek) – One-eyed giant

Cyhyraeth

(Welsh) – Death spirit

Cynocephalus

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Dog-headed humanoid

Dactyl

(Greek) – Little people and smith and healing spirits

Daemon

(Greek) – Incorporeal spirit

Dahu

(France, Switzerland and the north of Italy) – Similar to a deer or ibex; legs on one side of its body are shorter than on the other side

Daidarabotchi

(Japanese) – Giant responsible for creating many geographical features in Japan

Daitengu

(Japanese) – Most powerful class of tengu, each of whom lives on a separate mountain

Daitya

(Hindu) – Giant

Danava

(Hindu) – Water demon

Daphnaie

(Greek) – Laurel tree nymph

DatsueBa

(Japanese) – Old woman who steals clothes from the souls of the dead

DeadSeaApes

(Islamic) – Human tribe turned into apes for ignoring Moses’ message

DedMoroz

(Russia) – A winter spirit who delivers gifts to children on New Year’s Eve

DeerWoman

(Native American) – Human-deer hybrid

Deity

(Global) – Preternatural or supernatural possibly immortal being

Demigod

(Global) – Half human, half god

Dhampir

(Balkans) – Human/vampire hybrid

DiaoSiGui

(Chinese) – Hanged ghost

Dilong

(Chinese) – Earth dragon

Dip

(Catalan) – Demonic and vampiric dog

DiPenates

(Roman) – House spirit

Dipsa

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Extremely venomous snake

Dirawong

(Australian Aboriginal) – Goanna spirit

DiSmaUndarJordi

(Gotland) – Little people and nature spirits

Diwata

(Philippine) – Tree spirit

Djall

(Albanian) – Devil

DobharChu

(Irish) – King otter

DoGakwHoWad

(Abenaki) – Little people

Dokkaebi

(Korean) – Grotesque, horned humanoids

Dokkalfar

(Norse) – Male ancestral spirits; the Dark Elves

Dola

(Slavic) – Tutelary and fate spirit

Domovoi

(Slavic) – House spirit

Doppelganger

(German) – Ghostly double

Drac

(Catalan) – Lion or bull-faced dragon (French) – Winged sea serpent

Drakon

(Greek) – Greek dragons

Drakaina

(Greek) – Dragons depicted with female characteristics

Dragon

(Many cultures worldwide) – Fire-breathing and,/// (normally) winged reptiles

DragonTurtle

(Chinese) – Giant turtle with dragon-like head

Drangue

(Albanian) – Semi-human winged warriors

Draugr

(Norse) – Undead

Drekavac

(Slavic) – Restless ghost of an unbaptised child

DropBear

(Australian) – Large carnivorous koala that hunts by dropping on its prey from trees

Drow

(Scottish) – Cavern spirit

Drude

(German) – Possessing demon

Druk

(Bhutanese) – Dragon

Dryad

(Greek) – Tree nymph

Duende

(Spanish and Portuguese) – Little people and forest spirits

Duergar

(English) – Malevolent little people

Dullahan

(Irish) – Headless death spirit

Duwende

(Philippine) – Little people, some are house spirits, others nature spirits

Dvergr

(Norse) – Subterranean little people smiths

Dvorovoi

(Slavic) – Courtyard spirit

Dwarf

(Germanic) – Little people nature spirits

Dybbuk

(Jewish) – Spirit,/// (sometimes the soul of a wicked deceased) that possesses the living

DzeeDzeeBonDa

(Abenaki) – Hideous monster

Dzunukwa

(Kwakwaka’wakw) – Child-eating hag

EasterBunny

(Christianity) – Anthropomorphic lagomorph.

EasterBilby

(Australian) – Anthropomorphic bilby.

EachUisge

(Scottish) – Malevolent water horse

EagleSpirit

(Many cultures worldwide) – Leadership or guidance totem

EbuGogo

(Flores) – Diminutive humanoids, possibly inspired by Homo floresiensis

Echidna

(Greek)

Echeneis

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Remora, said to attach to ships to slow them down

Edimmu

(Sumerian) – Ghosts of those not buried properly

Egbere

(Yoruba) – Humanoid that carries a magical mat

Eikthyrnir

(Norse)

Einherjar

(Norse) – Spirits of brave warriors

Ekek

(Philippine) – Flesh-eating, winged humanoids

ElbowWitch

(Ojibwa) – Hags with awls in their elbows

Eldjotnar

(Norse) – Fire Giants who reside in Muspelheim, with Surtr as their leader

Eleionomae

(Greek) – Marsh nymph

Elemental

(Alchemy) – Personification of one of the Classical elements

Elepaio

(Hawaiian) – Monarch flycatcher spirit that guides canoe-builders to the proper trees

Elf

(Germanic) – Nature and fertility spirit

Eloko

(Central Africa) – Little people and malevolent nature spirits

Emere

(Yoruba) – Child that can move back and forth between the material world and the afterlife at will

Emim

(Jewish) – Giant

Empusa

(Greek) – Female demon that waylays travelers and seduces and kills men

Encantado

(Brazilian) – Dolphin-human shapeshifter

EnchantedMoor

(Portuguese) – Enchanted princesses

Enfield

(Heraldic) – Fox-greyhound-lion-wolf-eagle hybrid

Engkanto

(Philippine) – Neutral nature spirit

Enko

(Japanese) – Kappa of Shikoku and western Honshū

Ent

(worldwide/fantasy) -Living tree that is said to live for years

Epimeliad

(Greek) – Apple tree nymph

Erchitu

(Sardinia) – Ox-human, wereox

ErGui

(Chinese) – Hungry ghost

Erinyes

(Greek) – Winged spirits of vengeance or justice, also known as Furies

Erlking

(German) – Death spirit

ErymanthianBoar

(Greek) – Giant boar

EthiopianPegasus

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Horned, winged horse

Etiainen

(Finnish mythology) – Spirit being of a living person

Ettin

(English) – Three-headed giant

Eurynomos

(Greek) – Blue-black, carrion-eater in the underworld

Ewah

(Cherokee) – Human-cougar hybrid

Eerinis

(Lithuanian) – Lake spirit

Fachen

(Irish and Scottish) – Monster with half a body

Fafnir

(Germanic mythology) – Dwarf who was cursed and turned into a dragon. He was later slain by Sigurd in the Saga of Nibelung.

Fairy

(many cultures worldwide, esp. Germanic mythology/folklore) – Nature spirits

Familiar

(English) – Animal servant

FarDarrig

(Irish) – Little people that constantly play pranks

Farfadet

(French) – Small,/// (some half-meter tall), wrinkled, and brown-skinned helpful sprites.

Fates

(Greek) – Three time-controlling sisters

Faun

(Roman) – Human-goat hybrid nature spirit

FearGorta

(Irish) – Hunger ghost

FeatheredSerpent

Mesoamerican dragon

FeiLian

(Chinese) – Chinese wind god

Fenghuang

(Chinese) – Chinese Phoenix, female in marriage symbol

Fenodyree

(Manx) – House spirit

Fenrir

(Norse) – Gigantic, ravenous wolf

Fetch

(Irish) – Double or doppelgänger

Fext

(Slavic) – Undead

Finfolk

(Orkney) – Fish-human hybrid that kidnaps humans for servants

FirBolg

(Irish) – Ancestral race

FireBird

(Many cultures worldwide) – Regenerative solar bird

Firedrake

(Germanic) – Dragon

FishMan

(Cantabrian) – Amphibious, scaled humanoid

FlatwoodsMonster

(American Folklore),/// (West Virginia) – Alien, humanoid

Fomorian

(Irish) – Goat-headed giant

ForestBull

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Giant horned red cattle

Freybug
Fuath

(Celtic) – Malevolent water spirit

Fucanglong

(Chinese) – Underworld dragon

Funayurei

(Japanese) – Ghosts of people who drowned at sea

FuruUtsubo

(Japanese) – Animated jar

FutakuchiOnna

(Japanese) – Woman with a second mouth on the back of her head

Fylgja

(Scandinavian) – Animal familiar

Gaasyendietha

(Seneca) – Dragon

Gagana

(Russian) – Iron-beaked bird with copper talons

Gaki

(Japanese) – Ghosts of especially greedy people

Gallu

(Mesopotamian) – Underworld demons

Galtzagorriak

(Basque) – Small demonic servants

Gamayun

(Russian) – Prophetic human-headed bird

Gana

(Hindu) – Attendants of Shiva

Gancanagh

(Irish) – Male fairy that seduces human women

Gandabherunda

(Hindu) – Double-headed bird

Gandharva

(Hindu) – Male nature spirits, often depicted as part human, part animal

Gargouille

(French) – Water dragon

Garkain

(Australian Aboriginal) – A flying humanoid who envelops his victims

Garmr

(Norse) – Giant, ravenous hound

Garuda

(Hindu) – Human-eagle hybrid

Gashadokuro

(Japanese) – Giant malevolent skeletons

Gaueko

(Basque) – Wolf capable of walking upright

Geb

(Egyptian) – God of the Earth, married to Nut

Ged

(Heraldic) – The fish pike

Gegenees

(Greek) – Six-armed giant

GeniusLoci

(Roman) – Spirit that protects a specific place

German

(Slavic) – Male spirit associated with bringing rain and hail

Geryon

(Greek) – Three-headed six-armed giant with three torsos and (in some sources) six legs

GhillieDhu

(Scottish) – Tree guardian

Ghost

Disembodied spirits of those that have died

Ghoul

(Arabian) – Cannibalistic shapeshifting desert genie often classified as undead.

Giant

(Worldwide) – Immensely large and strong humanoids

GiantAnimal

(Worldwide) – Unusually large beasts

GichiAnamiEBizhiw

(Ojibwa) – Bison-snake-bird-cougar hybrid water spirit

Gidim

(Sumerian) – Ghost

Gigantes

(Greek) – Race of giants that fought the Olympian gods, sometimes depicted with snake-legs

Gigelorum

(Scottish) – Smallest animal

Girtablilu

(Akkadian) – Human-scorpion hybrid

Gjenganger

(Scandinavian) – Corporeal ghost

Glaistig

(Scottish) – Human-goat hybrid

Glashtyn

(Manx) – Malevolent water horse

Gnome

(Alchemy) – Diminutive Earth elemental

Goblin

(Medieval) – Grotesque, mischievous little people

Gog

(English) – Giant protector of London

GoldDiggingAnt

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Dog-sized ant that digs for gold in sandy areas

Golem

(Jewish) – Animated construct

Gorgades

(Medieval Bestiary) – Hairy humanoid

Gorgon

(Greek) – Fanged, snake-haired humanoids that turn anyone who sees them into stone

Goryo

(Japanese) – Vengeful ghosts, usually of martyrs

Grassman

(Ohio, USA) – Ape-like cryptid

Gremlin

(Folklore) – Creatures that sabotage airplanes

Griffin

(Heraldic) – Lion-eagle hybrid

Grigori

(Christian, Jewish, and Islamic mythology) – Fallen angels, father of Nephilim

Grim

(English and Scandinavian) – Tutelary spirits of churches

GrimReaper

(Worldwide) – Death angel often thought to be God’s/Satan’s assistant

Grindylow

(English) – Malevolent water spirit

Gualichu

(Mapuche) – Malevolent spirit

GuardianAngel

(Christian, Jewish, and Islamic belief) – Subclassification of angels that guard and protect a specific person or living being

GudElim

(Akkadian) – Human-bull hybrid

Guhin

(Japanese) – Anthropomorphic bird

GuiPo

(Chinese) – Ghost that manifests as an old woman

GuiShu

(Chinese) – Ghostly tree that confuses travelers by moving

Gulon

(Germanic) – Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid

Gumiho

(Korean mythology) – Demonic fox with thousands of tails believed to possess an army of spirits and magic in its tails

Gurangatch

(Australian Aboriginal) - An enormous reptile-fish whose movements carved out the landscape south of the Blue Mountains

Gurumapa

(Nepalese) – Child-eating demon

Gwyllgi

(Welsh) – Black dog

Gwyllion

(Welsh) – Malevolent spirit

Gyascutus

(American folklore) – Four-legged herbivore

Gytrash

(Lincolnshire and Yorkshire) – Black dog

Gyuki

(Japanese) – Bull-headed monster

Habrok

(Norse) – listed as the “best” hawk

Hadhayosh

(Persian) – gigantic land animal

Hades

(Greek) – Ruler of the Underworld

Haetae

(Korean) – dog-lion hybrid

Hag

(Many cultures worldwide) – wise old woman who is usually a malevolent spirit or a disguised goddess

Haietlik

(Nuu-chah-nulth) – water serpent

HaiUri

(Khoikhoi) – male cannibalistic partially invisible monster

Hakutaku

(Japanese) – talking beast which handed down knowledge on harmful spirits

Hakuturi

(Māori) – nature guardian

HalfElf

(Norse) – human-elf hybrid

Haltija

(Finnish) – spirit that protects a specific place

Hamadryad

(Greek) – oak tree nymph

Hamingja

(Scandinavian) – personal protection spirit

Hamsa

(Buddhist, Hindu and Jainism) – mystic bird

HanauEpe

(Rapa Nui) – long-eared humanoid

HantuAir

(Malay) – shapeshifting water spirit

HantuDemon

(Philippine) – demon

HantuRaya

(Malay) – demonic servant

Harionago

(Japanese) – humanoid female with barbed, prehensile hair

Harpy

(Greek) – birdlike human-headed death spirit

Haugbui

(Norse) – undead being who cannot leave its burial mound

Havsrå

(Norse) – saltwater spirit

Helloi

(Manipuri mythology) – celestial maidens, daughters of the Sky God Soraren

HeadlessHorseman

(European) – humanoid spirit who haunts or kills

HeadlessMule

(Brazilian) – fire-spewing, headless, spectral mule

Hecatonchires

(Greek) – primordial giants with 100 hands and fifty heads

Heikegani

(Japanese) – crabs with human-faced shells, the spirits of warriors killed in the Battle of Dan-no-ura

Heinzelmannchen

(German) – household spirit

Helead

(Greek) – fen nymph

Hellhound

(Many cultures worldwide) – underworld dog

Heracles

(Greek) – gatekeeper of Olympus

Hercinia

(Medieval Bestiaries) – glowing bird

Herensuge

(Basque) – dragon

Hesperides

(Greek) – nymph daughters of Atlas

Hidebehind

(United States) – nocturnal forest creature

Hiderigami

(Japanese) – drought spirit

Hieracosphinx

(Ancient Egypt) – falcon-headed sphinx

Hihi

(Japanese) – baboon monster

Hiisi

(Finnish) – nature guardian

Hippalectryon

(Greek)

Hippocamp

(Etruscan, Greek and Phoenician) – horse-fish hybrid

Hippogriff

(Medieval Bestiaries) – hybrid of a griffin and horse; a lion-eagle-horse hybrid

Hippopodes

(Medieval Bestiary) – horse-hoofed humanoid

Hircocervus

(Medieval Bestiary) – deer-goat hybrid

Hitodama

(Japanese) – ghosts of the newly dead, which take the form of fireballs

HitotsumeKozo

(Japanese) – one-eyed childlike spirit

Hob

(English) – house spirit

Hobbididance

(English) – malevolent spirit

Hobgoblin

(Medieval) – friendly or amusing goblin

Hodag

(Native American) – frog-mammoth-lizard hybrid

Hokhokw

(Kwakiutl) – bird

Hoko

(Japanese) – dog-like Chinese tree spirit

Homa

(Persian) – eagle-lion hybrid, similar to a griffin

HombreCaiman

(Colombian) – human-alligator hybrid

HombreGato

(Latin America) – human-cat hybrid

Homunculus

(Alchemy) – small animated construct

Hoo

(Japanese) – rooster-swallow-fowl-snake-goose-tortoise-stag-fish hybrid

Hoopoe

near passerine bird common to Africa and Eurasia that features in many mythologies in those continents

HoopSnake

snake which rolls by taking its tail in its mouth

HornedSerpent

(Native American) – serpentine rain spirit

Hotoke

(Japanese) – deceased person

Houri

(Islamic) – heavenly beings

Hraesvelg

(Norse) – giant, who in eagle form, creates the wind by beating his wings

Hrímþursar

(Norse) – frost giants who are the main inhabitants of either Jotunheim or Niflheim

Huaychivo

(Mayan) – human-deer hybrid

HuginnAndMuninn

(Norse) – pair of ravens associated with the Norse god Odin whose names mean Thought and Memory.

Huldufolk

(Icelandic/Faroese) – secret mound/rock dwelling elves

Hulder

(Scandinavian) – forest spirit

HuliJing

(Chinese) – nine-tailed fox spirit

Huma

(Persian) – regenerative fire bird

Humbaba

(Akkadian) – lion-faced giant

Hundun

(Chinese) – chaos spirit

Hupia

(Taíno) – nocturnal ghost

Hyakume

(Japanese) – hundred-eyes creature

Hydra

(Greek) – multi-headed water serpent/dragon

Hydros

(Medieval Bestiary) – snake whose poison causes the victim to swell up

Hydrus

(Medieval Bestiary) – snake from the Nile River that would kill crocodiles from the inside

Hyosube

(Japanese) – hair-covered kappa

Hypnalis

(Medieval Bestiary) – snake that kills its victims in their sleep

Hudhud

(mythology) – Hoopoe

Ishigaq

(Inuit) – Little people

IslandSatyr

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Savage human-goat hybrid from a remote island chain

Isonade

(Japanese) – Shark-like sea monster

IttanMomen

(Japanese) – Ghostly aerial phenomenon that attacks people

IwanaBozu

(Japanese) – Char which appeared as a Buddhist monk

Jackalope

(American) – Rabbit with antlers

JackInIrons

(English) – Malevolent giant

JackOLantern

(Medieval folklore) – Vegetal lantern

Jaculus

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Winged serpent or small dragon

Jasconius

(Medieval folklore) – Island-sized fish

JasyJaterei

(Guaraní) – Nature guardian and bogeyman

Jatayu

(Hindu mythology) – Vulture demigod

Jaud

(Slavic) – Vampirised premature baby

Jenglot

(Java) – Vampiric little people

Jengu

(Sawa) – Water spirit

Jentil

(Basque) – Megalith-building giant

Jenu

(Mi’kmaq) – Anthropophagous giant

Jerff

(Swedish) – Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid

JerseyDevil

(American) – Demonic dragon or flying demon who was given birth to by an American living in New Jersey

Jian

(Chinese) – One-eyed, one-winged bird who requires a mate for survival

Jiangshi

(Chinese) – Life-draining, reanimated corpse

Jiaolong

(Chinese) – Dragon

Jibakurei

(Japanese) – Spirit that protects a specific place

Jievaras

(Lithuanian) – House spirit

Jikininki

(Japanese) – Corpse-eating ghost

Jinn

(Arabian, Islamic) – Spiritual creatures; genii

JipijkaM

(Mi’kmaq) – Underwater horned snake; lives in lakes and eats humans

Jiufeng

(Chinese) – Nine-headed bird worshiped by ancient natives in Hubei Province.

JiuTouNiao

(Chinese) – Nine-headed, demonic bird

Jogah

(Iroquois) – Little people nature spirit

Jormungandr

(Norse) – Sea serpent

Jorogumo

(Japanese) – Spider woman

Jotai

(Japanese) – Animated folding screen cloth

Jotunn

(Norse) – Gigantic nature spirits

Jujak

(Korean) – Bird

Jumbee

(Guyanese) – Malevolent spirit

Kabouter

(Dutch) – Little people that live underground, in mushrooms, or as house spirits

Kachina

(Hopi and Puebloan) – Nature spirit

Kahaku

(Japanese) – Little people and water spirits

Kajsa

(Scandinavian) – Wind spirit

Kalakeyas

(Hindu) – Descendants of Kala

Kallikantzaroi

(Greek) – Grotesque, malevolent spirit

Kamaitachi

(Japanese) – Wind spirit

Kamatayan

(Philippine) – Philippine counterpart of Death

Kami

(Japanese) – Nature spirit

Kamikiri

(Japanese) – Hair-cutting spirit

KanbariNyudo

(Japanese) – Bathroom spirit

KanglaSha

(Manipuri mythology) – Great Dragon in the Kangla Palace

Kanbo

(Japanese) – Drought spirit

Kanedama

(Japanese) – Money spirit

Kappa

(Japanese) – Little people and water spirit

Kapre

(Philippine) – Malevolent tree spirit

Karakoncolos

(Bulgarian and Turkish), also in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia known as Karanđoloz – Troublesome spirit

Karakura

(Turkish) – Male night-demon

KarasuTengu

(Japanese) – Tengu with a bird’s bill

Karkadann

(Persian) – One-horned giant animal

Karkinos

(Greek) – Giant crab

Karura

(Japanese) – Eagle-human hybrid

Karzelek

(Polish) – Little people and mine spirits

KasaObake

(Japanese) – Animated parasol

Kasha

(Japanese) – Cat-like demon which descends from the sky and carries away corpses

Kashanbo

(Japanese) – Kappa who climb into the mountains for the winter

KatawaGuruma

(Japanese) – Woman riding on a flaming wheel

KatsuraOtoko

(Japanese) – Handsome man from the moon

Katallan

(Albanian) – Man-eating giant

Kaukas

(Lithuanian) – Nature spirit

KawaUso

(Japanese) – Supernatural river otter

KawaZaru

(Japanese) – Smelly, cowardly water spirit

KeLets

(Chukchi mythology) – Ogre or evil spirit

Keelut

(Inuit) – Hairless dog

KeeWakw

(Abenaki) – Half-human half-animal cannibalistic giant

Kekkai

(Japanese) – Amorphous afterbirth spirit

Kelpie

(Irish and Scottish) – Malevolent water horse

Ker

(Greek) – Female death spirit

KesaranPasaran

(Japanese) – Mysterious, white, fluffy creature

Keukegen

(Japanese) – Disease spirit

Keythong

(Heraldic) – Wingless griffin

Khyah

(Nepalese) – Fat, hairy ape-like creature

Kigatilik

(Inuit) – Night-demon

Kholomodumo

(Sotho) – Gluttonous monster that was one of the first beasts of creation

Kijimunaa

(Japanese) – Tree sprite from Okinawa

Kijo

(Japanese) – She-devil

Kikimora

(Slavic) – Female house spirit

Killmoulis

(English and Scottish) – Ugly, mischievous mill spirit

Kinnara

(Hindu) – Human-bird hybrid

KinU

(Japanese) – Bird

Kirin

(Japanese) – Japanese Unicorn

Kishi

(Angola) – Malevolent, two-faced seducer

Kitsune

(Japanese) – Fox spirit

KitsuneTsuki

(Japanese) – Person possessed by a fox spirit

Kiyohime

(Japanese) – Woman who transformed into a serpentine demon out of the rage of unrequited love

Klabautermann

(German) – Ship spirit

Knocker

(folklore),/// (Cornish and Welsh) – Little people and mine spirits

Knucker

(English) – Water dragon

Kobalos

(Greek) – Goblin like thieves and tricksters

Kobold

(German) – Little people and mine or house spirits

Kodama

(Japanese) – Tree spirit

Kofewalt

(Germanic) – House spirit

KoGok

(Abenaki) – Hideous monster

Kokakucho

(Japanese) – Ubume bird

Komainu

(Japanese) – Protective animal

KonakiJiji

(Japanese) – Infant that cries until it is picked up, then increases its weight and crushes its victim

KonohaTengu

(Japanese) – Bird-like creature

KoroPokGuru

(Ainu) – Little people

Korrigan

(Breton) – Little people and nature spirits

Kraken

(Scandinavian) – Sea monster

Krasnoludek

(Slavic) – Little people nature spirits

Krasue

(Southeast Asian) – Vampiric, floating head

Krampus

(Germany) – Christmas Devil who punishes badly-behaved children

KuarahyJara

(Guaraní) – Forest spirit

Kubikajiri

(Japanese) – Female corpse-chewing graveyard spirit

KuchisakeOnna

(Japanese) – Vengeful ghost of a woman mutilated by her husband

KudaGitsune

(Japanese) – Miniature fox spirit

Kudan

(Japanese) – Human-faced calf which predicts a calamity before dying

Kui

(Chinese) – One-legged monster

Kukudhi

(Albanian) – Female demon who spreads sickness

Kukwes

(Mi’kmaq) – Large, hairy, greedy, human-eating bipedal monsters whose scream can kill

Kulshedra

(Albanian) – Drought-causing dragon

Kumakatok

(Philippine) – Death spirits

Kumiho

(Korean) – Fox spirit

Kun

(Chinese) – Giant fish

Kupua

(Hawaiian) – Shapeshifting tricksters

Kurabokko

(Japanese) – Guardian spirit of a warehouse

KurageNoHinotama

(Japanese) – Jellyfish which floats through the air as a fireball

Kurma

(Hindu mythology) – Second avatar of Vishnu in the form of a Turtle

Kurupi

(Guaraní) – Wild man and fertility spirit

Kushtaka

(Tlingit) – Shapeshifting “land otter man”

KyeRyong

(Korean) – Chicken-lizard hybrid

Kyourinrin

(Japanese) – Animated scroll or paper

KyubiNoKitsune

(Japanese) – Nine-tailed fox

Kyuketsuki

(Japanese) – Vampire

LaBarTu

(Assyrian) – Disease demon

LabbMu

(Akkadian) – Sea snake

Ladyidday

(Slavic) – Sunstroke spirit

Ladon

(Greek) – Dragon guarding the golden apples of the Hesperides

Laelaps

(Greek) – Enchanted dog that always caught his prey

Laestrygonians

(Greek) – Anthropophagic giants

Lakanica

(Slavic) – Field spirit

LakeMonster

(Worldwide) – Gigantic animals reported to inhabit various lakes around the world

Lakhey

(Nepalese) – Demon with fangs

LaLlorona

(Latin America) – Death spirit associated with drowning

Lamassu

(Akkadian and Sumerian) – Protective spirit with the form of a winged bull or human-headed lion

LambtonWorm

(English) – Giant worm

Lamia

(Greek) – Child-devouring monster

Lamiak

(Basque) – Water spirit with duck-like feet

LaMojana

(Colombian) – Shapeshifting, female water spirit

Lampades

(Greek) – Underworld nymph

Landvaettir

(Norse) – Nature spirits

Langmeidong

(Manipuri mythology) – Semi human, semi hornbill creature

Lares

(Roman) – House spirit

LaSayona

(Venezuela) – Female ghost that punishes unfaithful husbands

LaTunda

(Colombian) – Nature spirit that seduces and kills men

LavaBear

Miniature bear thought to inhabit the lava beds of south central Oregon

LaukuDvasios

(Lithuanian) – Field spirit

Lauma

(Baltic) – Sky spirit

Lavellan

(Scottish) – Gigantic water rat

LeananSidhe

(Celtic) – Fairy lover

Leanashe

(Irish) – Possessing spirit or vampire

Leimakids

(Greek) – Meadow nymph

Leokampoi

(Etruscan) – Fish-tailed lion

Leontophone

(Medieval Bestiary) – Tiny animal poisonous to lions

Leprechaun

(Irish) – Cobbler spirit

Leszi

(Slavic) – Tree spirit

Leuce

(Greek) – White poplar tree nymph

Leucrota

(Medieval Bestiary) – Crocotta-lion hybrid

Leviathan

(Jewish) – Sea monster seen in Job 41

Leyak

(Balinese) – Anthropophagous flying head with entrails

LibyanAegipanes

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Human-horse hybrid

LibyanSatyr

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Human-goat hybrid

Liderc

(Hungary) – Magical chicken that transforms into a humanoid

LightningBird

(Southern Africa) – Magical bird found at sites of lightning strikes

Likho

(Slavic) – One-eyed hag or goblin

Lilin

(Jewish) – Night-demoness

Lilitu

(Assyrian) – Winged demon

Limnades

(Greek) – Lake nymph

Lindworm

(Germanic) – Dragon

Ljosalfar

(Norse) – Sunlight spirits; the Light Elves

Ljubi

(Albanian)- Demoness

LlamhigynYDwr

(Welsh) – Frog-bat-lizard hybrid

LochNessMonster

(Scottish) – Serpentine sea monster

Loki

(Norse mythology) – God of night

LoLol

(Abenaki) – Hideous monster

Long

Chinese dragon

Longana

(Italian) – Female human-goat hybrid and water spirit

LongMa

(Chinese) – Dragon-horse hybrid

Loogaroo

(French America) – Shapeshifting, female vampire

LouCarcolh

(French) – Snake-mollusk hybrid

LoupGarou

(French) – Werewolf

LovelandFrog

(American Folklore),/// (Ohio) – Cryptid, Humanoid Frog

LubberFiend

(English) – House spirit

Luduan

(Chinese) – Truth-detecting animal

Lugat

(Albanian) – Vampire

Luison

(Guaraní) – Werewolf | Cadaver-eating dog

Lusca

Sea Monster

Lutin

(French) – Amusing goblin

Lyngbakr

(Icelandic) Whale-like sea monster

Lynx

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Feline guide spirit

MaaAlused

(Estonian mythology) – Subterranean spirit

Machlyes

(Medieval bestiaries) – Hermaphroditic humanoid

Macrocephali

(Medieval bestiaries) – Giant-headed humanoid

MadamKoiKoi

(West African Mythology ) – Female ghost

Madremonte

(Colombian folklore) – Nature guardian

Maero

(Māori) – Savage, arboreal humanoids

Magog

(English folklore) – Giant protector of London

MahaPudma

(Hindu mythology) – Giant elephant that holds up the world

Mairu

(Basque mythology) – Megalith-building giant

MajasGari

(Latvian mythology) – Benevolent house spirit

Majitu
Makara

(Indian mythology) – Aquatic beings

MakuraGaeshi

(Japanese mythology) – Pillow-moving spirit

MalltYNos

(Welsh mythology) – Spirit of the hunt

MamiWata

(Africa and the African diaspora) – Supernaturally beautiful water spirits

Manananggal

(Philippine mythology) – Vampires that sever their torsos from their legs to fly around

Mandi

(Medieval bestiaries) – Humanoid with a forty-year lifespan

Mandrake

(Medieval folklore) – Diminutive, animated construct

Manes

(Roman mythology) – Ancestral spirits

Mannegishi

(Cree) – Little people with six fingers and no noses

Manticore

(Persian mythology) – Lion-human-scorpion hybrid

Mapinguari

(Brazilian mythology) – Giant sloth

Mara

(Scandinavian folklore) – Female night-demon

Marabbecca

(Italian folklore) – Malevolent water spirit

Mareikura

(Tuamotu) – Attendant of Kiho-tumu, the supreme god

MaresOfDiomedes

(Greek mythology) – Man-eating horses

Marid

(Arabian mythology) – Jinn associated fortune tellers

Marmennill

(Norse mythology) – Mermen with prophetic abilities

MaroDeives

(Lithuanian mythology) – Disease spirits

MaskiMonGweZoOs

(Abenaki mythology) – Shapeshifting toad spirit

Matagot

(French mythology) – Spirit that takes animal form; usually that of a black cat

Matsya

(Hindu mythology) – First Avatar of Vishnu in the form of a half-fish and half-man

Mayura

(Hindu mythology) – Peacock spirit

Mazzikin

(Jewish mythology) – Invisible, malevolent spirit

MboiTuI

(Guaraní mythology) – Snake-parrot hybrid

Mbwiri

(Central Africa) – Possessing demon

Medusa

(Greek mythology) – Serpent-female hybrid,/// (Gorgon) with numerous snake heads

MelekTaus
Meliae

(Greek mythology) – Ash tree nymph

Melusine

(Medieval folklore) – Female water spirit, with the form of a winged mermaid or serpent

Menehune

(Hawaiian mythology) – Little people and craftsmen

Menninkainen

(Finnish mythology) – Little people and nature spirits

Merlion

(Singapore) – Combination of a lion and a fish, the symbol of Singapore

Mermaid

(multiple cultures) – Human-fish hybrid

Merman

(multiple cultures) – Human-fish hybrid

Merlin

(English mythology) – Elderly wizard

Merrow

(Irish mythology and Scottish) – Human-fish hybrid

MeteeKolenOl

(Abenaki mythology) – Ice-hearted wizards

Mimi

(Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Extremely elongated humanoid that has to live in rock crevasses to avoid blowing away

MinkaBird

(Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Death spirit

Minokawa

(Philippine) – Giant swallow

Minotaur

(Greek mythology) – Human-bull hybrid

Mishibizhiw

(Ojibwa) – Feline water spirit

MisiGinebig

(Ojibwa) – Serpentine rain spirit

MisiKinepikw

(Cree) – Serpentine rain spirit

Mizuchi

(Japanese mythology) – Water dragon

Mogwai

(Chinese mythology) – Vengeful ghost or demon

Mohan

(Latin American folklore) – Nature spirit

MokeleMbembe

(Congo) – Water-dwelling creature

Mokoi

(Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Malevolent spirit that kills sorcerers

Mokorea

(Polynesian mythology) – Amphibious humanoid living in the spirit world,/// (underground world)

Monai

(Guaraní mythology) – Giant snake with antennae

Monocerus

(Medieval bestiaries) – One-horned stag-horse-elephant-boar hybrid, sometimes treated as distinct from the unicorn

MonoGrande

(South America) – Giant monkey

Monopod

(Medieval bestiaries) – Dwarf with one giant foot

MooinjerVeggey

(Manx folklore) – Nature spirit

Mora

(Slavic mythology) – Disembodied spirit

Morgens

(Breton and Welsh mythology) – Water spirits

MorinjiNoOkama

(Japanese mythology) – Animated tea kettle

Mormolykeia

(Greek) – Underworld spirit

Moroi

(Romanian) – Vampiric ghost

MossPeople

(Continental Germanic mythology) – Little people and tree spirits

Mothman

(American folklore) – Large grey winged humanoid with glowing red eyes

Mugwump

(Canadian folklore) – Fish-like lake monster

Mujina

(Japanese mythology) – Shapeshifting badger spirit

Muldjewangk

(Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Water monster

Multo

(Philippine mythology) – Spirit of a deceased person seeking justice or has unfinished business

Mummy

(Egyptian) – Undead creature who revives

MumaPadurii

(Romanian folklore) – Forest-dwelling hag

MungoonGali

(Australian Aboriginal) – Giant goanna

Muscaliet

(Medieval bestiaries) – Hare-squirrel-boar hybrid that has an intense body heat

Muse

(Greek mythology) – Spirits that inspire artists

Mushusshu

(Mesopotamian mythology)

Musimon

(Heraldic) – Sheep-goat hybrid

Myling

(Scandinavian folklore) – Ghosts of unbaptized children

Myrmecoleon

(Medieval bestiaries) – Ant-lion hybrid

Nachzehrer

(German) – Anthropophagous undead

Naga

(Buddhist and Hindu) – Nature and water spirits, serpentine or human-serpent hybrids

NagaFireballs

(Thai) – Spectral fire

Nagual

(Mesoamerica) – Human-animal shapeshifter

Naiad

(Greek) – Freshwater nymph

Nakki

(Finnish) – Water spirit

Namahage

(Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from the Oga Peninsula

Namazu

(Japanese) – Giant catfish whose thrashing causing earthquakes

NandoBaba

(Japanese) – Old woman who hides under the floor in abandoned storerooms

NangTakian

(Thai) – Tree spirit

NanomKeeaPoDa

(Abenaki) – Earthquake spirit

Napaeae

(Greek) – Grotto nymph

Narasimha

(Hindu mythology) – Avatar of Vishnu in the form of half-man/half-lion

Narecnitsi

(Slavic) – Fate spirit

Nariphon

(Thai) – Pod people

Nargun

(Gunai) – Water monster

Nasnas

(Arabian) – Half-human, half-demon creature with half a body

Nav

(Slavic) – Ghost

Nawao

(Hawaiian) – Savage humanoid

NDamKenoWet

(Abenaki) – Fish-human hybrid

Neptune

(Roman mythology) – God of freshwater and sea

Neck

(Germanic mythology) – Female water spirit

Negret

(Catalan) – Little people that turn into coins

Nekomata

(Japanese) – Split-tailed magical cat

Nekomusume

(Japanese) – Cat in the form of a girl

NemeanLion

(Greek) – Lion with impenetrable skin

Nephilim

(Abrahamic mythology) – Gigantic sons of Grigori and human women

Nereid

(Greek) – Nymph daughters of Nereus

Ngen

(Mapuche) – Nature spirit

Nguruvilu

(Mapuche) – Fox-like water snake

Nian

(Chinese) – Predatory animal

Nightmarchers

(Hawaiian) – Warrior ghosts

Nikusui

(Japanese) – Monster which appears as a young woman and sucks all of the flesh off of its victim’s body

Nimerigar

(Shoshone) – Aggressive little people

Ningyo

(Japanese) – Monkey-fish hybrid

NinkiNanka

(Western Africa) – Large reptile, possibly a dragon

Nisse

(Scandinavian) – House spirit

Niohoggr

(Norse) – Dragon

Nivatakavachas

(Hindu) – Ocean demon

Nix

(Germanic) – Female water spirit

Nobusuma

(Japanese) – Supernatural wall, also a monstrous flying squirrel

Nocnitsa

(Slavic) – Nightmare spirit

NopperaBo

(Japanese) – Faceless ghost

Nozuchi

(Japanese) – Small sea serpent

Nuckelavee

(Scottish) – Malevolent human-horse-fish hybrid

Nue

(Japanese) – Monkey-raccoon dog-tiger-snake hybrid

NuGui

(Chinese) – Vengeful female ghost

Nukekubi

(Japanese) – Disembodied, flying head that attacks people

NukuMaiTore

(Māori) – Forest spirit

Nuli

(Medieval Bestiary) – Humanoid with backwards, eight-toed feet

Numen

(Roman) – Tutelary spirit

Nuno

(Philippine) – Malevolent little people

Nuppeppo

(Japanese) – Animated chunk of dead flesh

Nurarihyon

(Japanese) – Head-sized ball-like creature that floats in the sea and teases sailors

NureOnna

(Japanese) – Female monster who appears on the beach

Nurikabe

(Japanese) – Spirit that manifests as an impassable, invisible wall

NyamiNyami

(Tonga,/// (Zimbabwean) mythology) – Snake-spirit of the Zambezi River

Nykstukas

(Lithuanian) – Cavern spirit

Nymph

(Greek) – Nature spirit

Obake

(Japanese) – Shapeshifting spirits

Obariyon

(Japanese) – Spook which rides piggyback on a human victim and becomes unbearably heavy

Obayifo

(Ashanti) – Vampiric possession spirit

Obia

(West Africa) – Gigantic animal that serves witches

Oceanid

(Greek) – Nymph daughters of Oceanus

Odei

(Basque) – Storm spirit

Odin

(Norse mythology) – King of Asgard

Odmience

(Slavic) – Changeling

Og

(Jewish) – Giant king of the Amorites

Ogopogo

(Canadian) Canadian Lake Monster

Ogun

(Nigeria) – Iron god for the Yoruba people,/// (South Western Nigeria)

Ogre

(Medieval folklore) – Large, grotesque humanoid

Oiwa

(Japanese) – Ghost of a woman with a distorted face who was murdered by her husband

Ojancanu

(Cantabrian) – Giant cyclops who embodies evil.

Okiku

(Japanese) – Spirit of a plate-counting servant girl, associated with the “Okiku-Mushi” worm

Okubi

(Japanese) – Death spirit

OkuriInu

(Japanese) – Dog or wolf that follows travelers at night, similar to the Black dog of English folklore

OleHigue

(Guyanese) – Vampiric hag who takes the form of a fireball at night

Omukade

(Japanese) – Giant, human-eating centipede that lives in the mountains

Oni

(Japanese) – Large, grotesque humanoid demon, usually having red skin and horns

Onibi

(Japanese) – Spectral fire

Onmoraki

(Japanese) – Bird-demon created from the spirits of freshly dead corpses

Onocentaur

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Human-donkey hybrid

Onoskelis

(Greek) – Shapeshifting demon

Onryo

(Japanese) – Vengeful ghost that manifests in a physical rather than a spectral form

Onza

(Aztec and Latin American folklore) – Wild cat, possibly a subspecies of cougar

OozlumBird

(Unknown origin) – Bird that flies backwards

Ophiotaurus

(Greek) – Bull-serpent hybrid

Opinicus

(Heraldic) – Lion-eagle hybrid, similar to a griffin, but with leonine forelimbs

OrangBunian

(Malay) – Forest spirit

OrangMinyak

(Malay) – Spectral rapist

Ordog

(Hungarian) – Shapeshifting demon

Oread

(Greek) – Mountain nymph

Ork

(Tyrolean) – Little people and house spirits

Orobas

(European) – Horse-headed, honest oracle classed as a demon

OrphanBird

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Peacock-eagle-swan-crane hybrid

Orthrus

(Greek) – Two-headed dog

Osiris

(Hellenized) – God of the dead and the judge of the underworld

Oshun

(Nigeria) – God of love and fertility

Otso

(Finnish) – Bear spirit

Ouroboros

(Worldwide) – Mystic serpent/dragon that eats its own tail

Ovinnik

(Slavic) – Malevolent threshing house spirit

Owlman

(Cornish) – Owl-like humanoid

PaasselkaDevils

(Finnish) – Spectral fire

Pamola

(Abenaki) – Weather spirit

Panes

(Greek) – Human-goat hybrids descended from the god Pan

Pandi

(Medieval Bestiary) – White-haired humanoid with giant ears and eight fingers and toes

Panis

(Hindu) – Demons with herds of stolen cows

Panlong

(Chinese) – Water dragon

Panotti

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Humanoid with gigantic ears

Panther

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Feline with sweet breath

Parandrus

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Shapeshifting animal whose natural form was a large ruminant

Pard

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Fast, spotted feline believed to mate with lions to produce leopards

Pardalokampoi

(Etruscan) – Fish-tailed leopard

Patagon

(Medieval folklore) – Giant race reputed to live in the area of Patagonia

Patasola

(Latin America) – Anthropophagous, one-legged humanoid

Patupairehe

(Māori) – White-skinned nature spirits

Pech

(Scottish) – Strong little people

Pegaeae

(Greek) – Spring nymph

Pegasus

(Greek) – Winged horse

Pegacorn

Pegasus-unicorn hybrid

Pelesit

(Malay) – Servant spirit

Peluda

(French) – Dragon

Penanggalan

(Malay) – Vampires that sever their heads from their bodies to fly around, usually with their intestines or other internal organs trailing behind

Peng

(Chinese) – Giant bird

Penghou

(Chinese) – Tree spirit

Peri

(Persian) – Winged humanoid

Peryton

(Allegedly Medieval folklore) – Deer-bird hybrid

Pesanta

(Catalan) – Nightmare demon in the form of a cat or dog

Peuchen

(Chilota and Mapuche) – Vampiric, flying, shapeshifting serpent

PhiTaiHong

(Thai) – Ghost of a person who has died suddenly of a violent or cruel death

Phoenix

(Phoenician) – Regenerative bird reborn from its own ashes

Piasa

(Native American mythology) – Winged, antlered feline-like dragon

Piatek

(Armenian) – Large land animal

PictishBeast

(Pictish stones) – Stylistic animal, possibly a dragon

Pillan

(Mapuche) – Nature spirit

Plagg

([Japanese spirit])

PimSkwaWagenOwad

(Abenaki) – Water spirit

Piru

(Finnish) – Minor demon

Pishacha

(Hindu) – Carrion-eating demon

Pishtaco

(Peru) – Monster man that steals its victim’s body fat for cannibalistic purposes

PitaSkog

(Abenaki) – Serpentine rain spirit

Pixie

(Cornish) – Little people and nature spirits

Pixiu

(Chinese) – Winged lion

PiYao

(Chinese) – Horned, dragon-lion hybrid

Plakavac

(Slavic) – Vampire created when a mother strangles her child

PokWejeeMen

(Abenaki) – Tree spirit

Polevik

(Polish) – Little people and field spirits

PolloMaligno

(Colombian) – Man-eating chicken spirit

Polong

(Malay) – Invisible servant spirit

Poltergeist

(German) – Ghost that moves objects

Pombero

(Guaraní) – Wild man and nature spirit

Ponaturi

(Māori) – Grotesque, malevolent humanoid

Pontianak

(Malay) – Undead, vampiric women who died in childbirth

PopeLickMonster

(American Folklore) Kentucky Urban Legend – Cryptid, a murderous creature that is part man, sheep, and goat

Poukai

(Māori) – Giant bird

Preta

(Buddhist, Hindu, and Jain) – Ghosts of especially greedy people

Pricolici

(Romanian – Roman) – Undead wolf

Psoglav

(Serbia) – Dog-headed monster

Psotnik

(Slavic) – Mischievous spirit

Psychai

(Greek) – Butterfly-winged nymphs, daughters of Psyche

Psychopomp

(Greek) – Creatures, spirits, angels, or deities in many religions who escort newly deceased souls from Earth to the afterlife

Puca

(Welsh) – Shapeshifting animal spirit

Puki

(Icelandic) – Malevolent little person

Puck

(English) – House spirit

Putz

(German) – House spirit

Pugot

(Philippine) – Headless humanoid

Puk

(Frisian) – House spirit

Pukis

(Latvian) – Dragon

Puckwudgie

(Native American mythology) – Troll-like gray-skinned being

Pygmy

(Greek) – Little people

Pyrausta

(Greek) – Insect-dragon hybrid

Python

(Greek) – Serpentine dragon

Qalupalik

(Inuit mythology) – Aquatic human abductor

Qilin

(Chinese) – Dragon-ox-deer hybrid

Qiqirn

(Inuit) – Large, bald dog spirit

Qliphoth

(Jewish) – Evil spirits

QuestingBeast

(Arthurian legend) – Serpent-leopard-lion-hart hybrid

Quetzalcoatl

(Aztec) – Important Aztec god whose name means “feathered serpent”; he is not to be confused with the quetzal, a type of bird

Quinotaur

(Frankish) – Five-horned bull

Ra

(Norse) – Spirit that protects a specific place

Rabisu

(Akkadian) – Vampiric spirit that ambushes people

Radande

(Swedish) – Tree spirit

Ragana

(Lithuanian) – Malevolent witch

Raiju

(Japanese) – Lightning spirit

RainBird

(Native American) – Rain spirit

RainbowCrow

(Lenape) – Crow spirit

RainbowFish

(Hindu) – Whale-sized, multi-colored fish

RainbowSerpent

(Australian Aboriginal) – Snake

Rakshasa

(Buddhist and Hindu) – Shapeshifting demon

Ramidreju

(Cantabrian) – Extremely long, weasel-like animal

Rarog

(Slavic) – Whirlwind spirit

RavenMocker

(Cherokee) – Life-draining spirit

RavenSpirit

(Native American, Norse, and Siberian) – Trickster spirit

Ratatoskr

(Norse) – Squirrel spirit

RaystownRay

(American Folklore) – Possible plesiosaur or serpent

Redcap

(English) – Evil, ugly humanoid

ReEm

(Jewish) – Gigantic land animal

Reichsadler

(Heraldic) – Eagle, sometimes depicted with two heads

Rephaite

(Jewish) – Giant

ReptilianHumanoid

(Global) – Human-lizard hybrid

Revenant

(Medieval folklore) – Reanimated dead

Roc

(Arabian and Persian) – Gigantic bird

Rokurokubi

(Japanese) – Long-necked, humanoid trickster

Rompo

(Africa and India) – Skeletal creature with elements of a rabbit, badger, and bear

Rong

(Vietnamese) dragon

Rougarou

(French America) – Human-wolf shapeshifter

Rusalka

(Slavic) – Female water spirit

Ryu

Japanese dragon

Saci

(Brazilian) – One-legged nature spirit

Sagari

(Japanese) – Horse head that dangles from trees on Kyūshū

Sakabashira

(Japanese) – Haunted pillar, installed upside-down

Salamander

(Alchemy) – Fire elemental

Samebito

(Japanese) – Shark-man servant of the dragon king of the sea

Samodiva

(Slavic) – Nature spirit

Sampati

(Hindu) – The demigod Jatayu’s brother

Sandman

(Northern Europe) – Nursery spirit that induces sleep in children

Sango

(South Western Nigeria) – Yoruba king of arts, music, dance and entertainment

Santelmo

(Philippine) – Spirits in the form of fireballs that roam around the forest

SantaClaus

(North Pole-European folklore) – Elderly man who delivers gifts to well-behaved children on the night of Christmas Eve

Sanziana

(Romanian) – Nature spirit

Sarimanok

(Philippine) – Bird of good fortune

Sarngika

(Hindu) – Bird spirit

Sarugami

(Japanese) – Wicked monkey spirit who was defeated by a dog

Satori

(Japanese) – Mind-reading humanoid

Satan

(Heaven–Abrahamic mythology) – Ruler of Hell

Satyr

(Greek) – Human-goat hybrid and fertility spirit

Satyrus

(Medieval Bestiary) – Apes who always bear twins, one the mother loves, the other it hates

SazaeOni

(Japanese) – Shapeshifting turban snail spirit

Sceadugenga

(English) – Shapeshifting undead

Scitalis

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Snake which mesmerizes its prey

ScorpionMan

(Sumerian) – Human-scorpion hybrid

Scylla

(Greek) – Human-snake hybrid with a snake’s tail, twelve legs, and six long-necked snake heads

SeaBee

(Heraldic) – Fish-tailed bee

SeaLion

(Heraldic) a legendary creature that has the head and upper body of a lion, but with webbed forelimbs and a fish tail.

SeaMonk

(Medieval folklore) – Fish-like humanoid

SeaMonster

(Worldwide) – Giant, marine animals

SeaSerpent

(Worldwide) – Serpentine sea monster

SeaWyvern

(Heraldic) – Fish-tailed wyvern

Seko

(Japanese) – Water spirit which can be heard making merry at night

Selkie

(Faroese, Icelandic, Irish, and Scottish) – Human-seal shapeshifter

SenpokuKanpoku

(Japanese) – Human-faced frog which guides newly deceased souls to the graveyard

Seps

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Snake with corrosive venom

Serpent

(Worldwide) – Snake spirit

Serpopard

(Ancient Egypt) – Serpent-leopard hybrid

Shachihoko

(Japanese) – Tiger-carp hybrid

Shade

(Worldwide) – Spiritual imprint

ShadowPeople

(American) – Malevolent ghost

Shahbaz

(Persian) – Giant eagle or hawk

Shaitan

(Islam) – Islamic version of the Devil (Satan) from the Bible

ShangYang

(Chinese) – Rain bird

Shedim

(Jewish) – Chicken-legged demon

Shedu

(Akkadian and Sumerian) – Protective spirit who takes the form of a winged bull or human-headed lion

Shellycoat

(English, Scottish and German, as schellenrocc) – Water spirit

Shen

(Chinese) – Shapeshifing sea monster

Shenlong

(Chinese) – Weather dragon

Shibaten

(Japanese) – Water spirit from Shikoku

Shikigami

(Japanese) – Servant spirit

ShikiOji

(Japanese) – Child-sized servant spirit

Shikome

(Japanese) – Underworld hag

Shinigami

(Japanese) – “Death god”

ShiroBozu

(Japanese) – White, faceless spirit

Shirouneri

(Japanese) – Animated mosquito netting or dust cloth

Shiryo

(Japanese) – Spirit of a dead person

Shisa

(Japanese) – Lion-dog hybrid

Shishi

(Chinese) – Protective animal

Shojo

(Japanese) – Red-haired sea-sprites who love alcohol

Shokera

(Japanese) – Creature that peers in through skylights

Shtriga

(Albanian) – Vampire witch that feeds on children

ShuiGui

(Chinese) – Drowned ghost

ShugMonkey

(English) – Dog/monkey

Shunoban

(Japanese) – Red-faced ghoul

ShutenDoji

(Japanese) – Ruler of the Oni

Sídhe

(Irish and Scottish) – Ancestral or nature spirit

Sigbin

(Philippine) – Goat-like vampire

Sileni

(Greek) – Bald, fat, thick-lipped, and flat-nosed followers of Dionysus

Simargl

(Slavic) – Winged dog

Simurgh

(Persian) – Dog-lion-peacock hybrid

Singa

(Batak) – Feline animal

SintHolo

(Choctaw) – Serpentine rain spirit

Siren

(Greek) – Human-bird hybrid

Sirin

(Slavic) – Demonic human-headed bird

Sirrush

(Akkadian) – Dragon with aquiline hind legs and feline forelegs

Sisiutl

(American Indian) – Two-headed sea serpent

SiTeCah

(Paiute) – Red-haired giants

Sjora

(Norse) – Freshwater spirit

Sjovaettir

(Norse) – Sea spirit

SkinWalker

(American Indian) – Animal-human shapeshifter

Skogsra

(Scandinavian) – Forest spirit

Skoll

(Norse) – Wolf that chases the Sun

Skookum

(Chinook Jargon) – Hairy giant

Skeleton

(Medieval folklore) – Living skeletons

Skrzak

(Slavic) – Flying imp

SkyWomen

(Polish) – Weather spirit

Sleipnir

(Norse) – Eight-legged horse

Sluagh

(Irish and Scottish) – Restless ghost

SodehikiKozo

(Japanese) – Invisible spirit which pulls on sleeves

Sogenbi

(Japanese) – Fiery ghost of an oil-stealing monk

Soragami

(Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon

SorakiGaeshi

(Japanese) – Sound of trees being cut down, when later none seem to have been cut

Sorobanbozu

(Japanese) – Ghost with an abacus

Sotangitsune

(Japanese) – Fox spirit from Kyoto

Soucouyant

(Trinidad and Tobago) – Vampiric hag who takes the form of a fireball at night

Spearfinger

(Cherokee) – Sharp-fingered hag

Spectre

(Worldwide) – Terrifying ghost

Sphinx

(Greek) – Winged woman-headed lion

Spiridus

(Romanian) – Little people

Spirit

Ghosts

Spriggan

(Cornish) – Guardians of graveyards and ruins

Sprite

(Medieval folklore) – little people, ghosts or elves

Squonk

(American) – Ugly and lonely creature capable of evading capture by dissolving itself into a pool of tears

Stihi

(Albanian) – Demonic dragon who guards a treasure

Strigoi

(Romanian) – Vampire

Strix

(Roman) – Vampiric bird

Struthopodes

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Humanoid whose males have enormous feet, and females have tiny feet

Strzyga

(Slavic) – Vampiric undead

Stuhac

(Slavic) – Malevolent mountain spirit

StymphalianBird

(Greek) – Metallic bird

Suangi

(New Guinea) – Cannibalistic sorcerer

Succubus

(Medieval folklore) – Female night-demon

Sudice

(Slavic) – Fortune spirit

SunakakeBaba

(Japanese) – Sand-throwing hag

Sunekosuri

(Japanese) – Small dog- or cat-like creature that rubs against a person’s legs at night

Surma

(Finnish) – Hellhound

Suzaku

(Japanese) – Japanese version of the Chinese Vermillion Bird

Svaoilfari

(Norse) – Unnatural strong horse, father of Sleipnir

Svartalfar

(Norse) – Cavern spirits; the Black Elves

Swallower

(Ancient Egyptian) – Crocodile-leopard-hippopotamus hybrid

SwanMaiden

(Worldwide) – Swan-human shapeshifter

Sylph

(Alchemy) – Air elemental

Sylvan

(Medieval folklore) – Forest spirit

Syrbotae

(Medieval Bestiaries) – African giant

Syrictae

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Reptilian humanoid

Tachash

(Jewish) – Large land animal

Tailypo

(American Folklore),/// (Appalachia) – Powerful animal, that takes revenge on those who steal its tail

Taimatsumaru

(Japanese) – Tengu surrounded in demonic fire

Takam

(Persian) – Nature spirit

TakaOnna

(Japanese) – Female spirit which can stretch itself to peer into the second story of a building

Talos

(Greek) – Giant made of bronze

Tangie

(Scottish) – Shapeshifting water spirit

Taniwha

(Māori) – Water spirit

Tantankororin

(Japanese) – Unharvested persimmon which becomes a monster

Tanuki

(Japanese) – Shapeshifting raccoon dog

TaotaoMona

(Mariana Islands) – Ancestral spirits

Taotie

(Chinese) – Greed spirit

Tapairu

(Mangaia) – Nature spirit

Tarasque

(French) – Dragon with leonine, turtle, bear, and human attributes

Tartalo

(Basque) – One-eyed giant

Tartaruchi

(Christian) – Demonic punisher

TatamiTataki

(Japanese) – Poltergeist that hits the tatami mats at night

Tatzelwurm

(Alpine Folklore) lizard-like creature, often described as having the face of a cat, with a serpent-like body which may be slender or stubby, with four short legs or two forelegs

Tatsu

Japanese dragon

Taurokampoi

(Etruscan) – Fish-tailed bull

Tavara

(Trabzon) – Night-demon[citation needed]

TejuJagua

(Guaraní) – Lizard with seven dog heads

Tecumbalam

(Mayan) – Bird

Tengu

(Japanese) – Anthropomorphic bird

Tennin

(Japanese) – Angelic humanoid

TeNoMe

(Japanese) – Ghost of a blind man, with his eyes on his hands

Tepegoz

(Azerbaijani) – Azerbaijani mythical creature similar to the cyclops Polyphemus

TerribleMonster

(Jewish) – Lion-eagle-scorpion hybrid made from the blood of murder victims

TeumessianFox

(Greek) – Gigantic fox

Theriocephalus

(Medieval folklore) – Animal-headed humanoid

ThreeLeggedBird

(Asia and Africa) – Solar bird

Thunderbird

(Native American) – Avian lightning bird spirit

Thor

(Norse mythology) – God of thunder and storm

Tiangou

(Chinese) – Meteoric dog

Tianlong

(Chinese) – Celestial dragon

Tibicena

(Canarian) – Evil Dog

TiddyMun

(English) – Bog spirit

Tigmamanukan

(Philippine) – Asian fairy bluebird

Tigris

(Jewish) – Giant lion

Tikbalang

(Philippine) – Anthropomorphic horse

Tikoloshe

(Zulu) – Little people and water spirit

Timingila

(Hindu) – Sea monster

Tipua

(Māori) – Spirit that protects a specific place

Titan

(Greek) – Primeval god

Tiyanak

(Philippine) – Demons that are souls of dead unbaptized babies

Tizheruk

(Inuit) – Sea serpent

Tlahuelpuchi

(Tlaxcalan) – Shapeshifting vampire

TofuKozo

(Japanese) – Spirit child carrying a block of tofu

ToireNoHanakosan

(Japanese) – Ghost who lurks in grade school restroom stalls

Tomte

(Scandinavian) – House spirit

Topielec

(Slavic) – Water spirit

Totetsu

(Japanese) – Greed spirit

Toyol

(Malay) – Servant spirit

Trasgo

(Spanish and Portuguese) – Grotesque, mischievous little people

Trauco

(Chilota) – Fertility spirit

Trenti

(Cantabrian) – Diminutive demon

Trickster

Character in a story which exhibits a great degree of intellect or secret knowledge, and uses it to play tricks or otherwise disobey normal rules and conventional behaviour

Tripurasura

(Hindu) – Demonic inhabitants of Tripura

Tritons

(Greek) – Male human-fish hybrid

Troll

(Norse) – Nature spirit

Trow

(Orkney and Shetland) – Little people and nature spirits

TsiNoo

(Abenaki) – Vampiric demon

Tsuchigumo

(Japanese) – Shapeshifting, giant spider

Tsuchinoko

(Japanese) – Plump snake-like creature

Tsukumogami

(Japanese) – Inanimate object that becomes animated after existing for 100 years

TsulKalu

(Cherokee) – Giant nature spirit

TsuraraOnna

(Japanese) – Icicle woman

TsurubeOtoshi

(Japanese) – Monster which drops or lowers a bucket from the top of a tree to catch people

TugarinZmeyevich

(Slavic) – Evil shapeshifter

TylwythTeg

(Welsh) – Nature spirit

Tupilaq

(Inuit) – Animated construct

Turehu

(Māori) – Pale spirit

Turst

(Swiss) – legendary figure who turns people into dogs

Turul

(Hungarian) – Giant falcon that helped shape the origins of the Magyars

Tyger

(Heraldry) – Like a real tiger, but lacks stripes. It has the tufted tail of a lion and a thick mane along the neck like a horse

Typhon

(Greek) – Winged, snake-legged giant

Tzitzimitl

(Aztec) – Skeletal star spirit

Ubume

(Japanese) – Ghosts of women who died in childbirth

UchekLangmeidong

(Manipuri mythology) – Semi human, semi hornbill creature

UmaNoAshi

(Japanese) – Horse’s leg which dangles from a tree and kicks passersby

Umibozu

(Japanese) – Ghost of drowned priest

UmiNyobo

(Japanese) – Female sea monster who steals fish

Undead

(Worldwide) – Dead that behave as if alive

UnderwaterPanther

(Native American) – Feline water spirit

Undine

(Alchemy) – Water elemental

Unhcegila

(Lakota) – Dragon

Unicorn

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Horse-like creature with the legs of an antelope, the tail of a lion and a single magical healing horn.

Unktehi

(Lakota) – Serpentine rain spirit

Unktehila

(Lakota) – Reptilian water monster

Upinis

(Lithuanian) – River spirit

Urayuli

(Native American) – Hairy giant

Urias

(Romanian) – Giant

Urmahlullu

(Mesopotamian) – Lion-human hybrid guardian spirit

UshiOni

(Japanese) – Bull-headed monster

Utukku

(Akkadian) – ″Underworld messenger spirit″

Uwan

(Japanese) – Spirit that shouts to surprise people

Vadatajs

(Latvian) – Spirit that misleads people

Vahana

(Hindu) – Divine mounts

Vaibhavi

(Indian) – Deadly snake

Valkyrie

(Norse) – Female spirit that leads souls of dead warriors to Valhalla

Valva

(Romanian) – Female nature spirit

Valravn

(Danish) – Supernatural raven

Vampire

(Slavic) – Reanimated corpse that feeds on blood

Vanara

(Hindu) – Human-ape hybrid

Vantoase

(Romanian) – Female weather spirit

Varaha

(Hindu mythology) – Third Avatar of Vishnu in the form of a boar

Varcolac

(Romanian) – Vampire or werewolf

Vardoger

(Scandinavian) – Ghostly double

Vedrfolnir

(Norse) – Hawk sitting between the eyes of an eagle in the crown of the World Tree Yggdrasil

Veli

(Latvian) – Ghost, shade, formed after a death of a human

VeriSelen

Chuvash dragon

Vetala

(Hindu) – Corpses possessed by vampiric spirits

Víbria

(Catalan) – Dragon with breasts and an eagle’s beak

Vielfras

(German) – Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid

Vila

(Slavic) – Weather spirit

Vilkacis

(Latvian) – Animalistic, werewolf-like monster

Virunas

(Colombian) – Handsome demon

VisionSerpent

(Mayan) – Mystical dragon

Vídopnir

(Norse) – Rooster that sits atop the tree

Vodyanoy

(Slavic) – Male water spirit

Vrykolakas

(Greek) – Undead wolf-human hybrid

Vaettir

(Norse) – Nature spirit

Waldgeist

(German) – Forest spirit

WanaGamesAk

(Abenaki) – Water spirits

Wani

(Japanese) – Crocodilian water monster

Wanyudo

(Japanese) – Demon in the form of a burning human-headed ox cart

WarakNgendog

(Indonesian Muslim) – Egg-laying bird

Warg

(English and Scandinavian O.N. vargr) – Giant, demonic wolf

Warlock

(Worldwide) – Male witch

WassanMonGaneehlaAk

(Abenaki) – Aurora spirits

WaterMonkey

(Chinese) – Water spirit

WaterSprite

(Alchemy) – Water elemental

WatiKutjara

(Australia Aboriginal) – Goanna spirits

WaWonDeeAMegw

(Abenaki) – Shapeshifting snail spirit

WeisseFrauen

(German) – Female spirit

Wekufe

(Mapuche) – Demon

Wendigo

(Algonquian) – Anthropophagous spirit

Wentshukumishiteu

(Inuit) – Water spirit

Werecat

(Worldwide) – Feline-human shapeshifter

Werehyena

(Africa) – Hyena-human shapeshifter

Werewolf

(Worldwide) – Wolf-human shapeshifter

WhiteLady

(Worldwide) – Ghost of a murdered or mistreated woman

Whowie

(Australian Aboriginal) – Giant frog-headed goanna with six legs

WildMan

(European) – Hairy, bipedal, man-like creature

WillOTheWisp

(Worldwide) – Spectral fire

WirryCow

(Scottish) – Malevolent spirit

Witch

(Worldwide) – Person who practices magic

WitteWieven

(Dutch) – Female, ancestral spirit

Wolpertinger

(German) – Forest animal comprised from various animal parts,/// (similar to a Chimera)

Wondjina

(Australia Aboriginal) – Weather spirit

Wraith

(Scottish) – Water spirit or ghostly apparition

Wulver

(Scottish) – Wolf-headed humanoid spirit

WuTouGui

(Chinese) – Beheaded ghost

Wyrm

English dragon

Wyvern

(Germanic Heraldic) – Flying reptile, usually with two legs and two wings

Xana

(Asturian) – Female water spirit

Xanthus

(Greek)

Xecotcovach

(Mayan) – Bird

Xelhua

(Aztec) – Giant

Xiao

(mythology), (Chinese) – Ape or four-winged bird

XingTian

(Chinese) – Headless giant

Xiuhcoatl

(Aztec) – Drought spirit

Xhindi

(Albanian) – Elves

Yacumama

(South America) – Sea monster

Yacuruna

(Indigenous people of the Amazon) – Mythical water people, with backwards heads and feet

Yadokai

(Japanese) – Malevolent, nocturnal spirit

YagyoSan

(Japanese) – Demon who rides through the night on a headless horse

Yaksha

(Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainism) – Male nature spirit

Yakshi

(Keralite) – Vampire

Yakshini

(Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainism) – Female nature spirit

YakubyoGami

(Japanese) – Disease and misfortune spirit

Yale

(Medieval Bestiaries) – Antelope- or goat-like animal with swiveling horns

Yazhi

(Tamil) – Lion-like beast

YalleryBrown

(English) – Nature spirit

Yama

(Yama,/// (East Asia)) – Wrathful god

YamaBiko

(Japanese) – Echo spirit

YamaBito

(Japanese) – Savage, mountain-dwelling humanoid

YamaChichi

(Japanese) – Monkey-like mountain spirit

YamaInu

(Japanese) – Dog-like mountain spirit

YamaOtoko

(Japanese) – Mountain giant

YamataNoOrochi

(Japanese) – Gigantic, eight-headed serpent

YamaUba

(Japanese) – Malevolent, mountain-dwelling hag

YamaWaro

(Japanese) – Hairy, one-eyed spirit

Yanari

(Japanese) – Spirit which causes strange noises

Yaoguai

(Chinese) – Animalistic demon or fallen gods

YaraMaYhaWho

(Australian Aboriginal) – Diminutive, sucker-fingered vampire

Yatagarasu

(Japanese) – Three-legged crow of Amaterasu

YatoNoKami

(Japanese) – Serpent spirits

YethHound

(English) – Headless dog

Yeti

(Himalayan) – Mountain bigfoot

Yilbegan

(Turkic) – Either a dragon or a giant

Yobuko

(Japanese) – Mountain dwelling spirit

Yokai

(Japanese) – Supernatural monster

YomotsuShikome

(Japanese) – Underworld hag

Yong

Korean dragon

Yosei

(Japanese) – Fairy

Yosuzume

(Japanese) – Mysterious bird that sings at night, sometimes indicating that the okuri-inu is near

YouHunYeGui

(Chinese) – Wandering ghost

Yowie

(Australian Aboriginal) – Nocturnal human-ape hybrid, also Yahoo

Ypotryll

(Heraldic) – Boar-camel-ox-serpent hybrid

YuanGui

(Chinese) – Distressed ghost

Yukinko

(Japanese) – Childlike snow spirit

YukiOnna

(Japanese) – Female snow spirit

Yurei

(Japanese) – Ghost

Yuxa

(Tatar) – 100-year-old snake that transforms into a beautiful human

Zahhak

(Persian) – Dragon

Zaltys

(Baltic) – Serpentine fertility spirit

Zamzummim

(Jewish) – Giant

ZanaEMalit

(Albanian) – Mountain fairy who bless warriors

Zână

(Romanian) – Nature spirit

ZashikiWarashi

(Japanese) – House spirit

Zburator

(Romanian) – Wolf-headed dragon

Zduhac

(Slavic mythology) – Disembodied, heroic spirit

Zeus

(Greek) – God of lightning and storms

ZennyoRyuo

(Japanese) – Rain-making dragon

ZharPtitsa

(Slavic) – Glowing bird

Zhulong

(Chinese) – Pig-headed dragon

ZhuQue

(Chinese) – Fire elemental bird

Ziburinis

(Lithuanian) – Forest spirit in the form of a glowing skeleton

Zilant

(Tatar) – Flying chicken-legged reptile

Zin

(West Africa) – Water spirits

Ziz

(Jewish) – Giant bird

Zlatorog

(Slovenia) – White golden-horned deer

Zmeu

(Romanian folklore) – Giant with a habit of kidnapping young girls

Zmiy

Slavic dragon

Zombie

(Vodou/Worldwide) – Re-animated corpse

Zorigami

(Japanese) – Animated clock

Zuijin

(Japanese) – Tutelary spirit

ZunberaBo

(Japanese) – Faceless ghost

Implementations

Get a short descriptive string of the Legendary creature

Trait Implementations

Build a Basic stat

Returns a copy of the value. Read more

Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

This method tests for self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==. Read more

This method tests for !=.

Auto Trait Implementations

Blanket Implementations

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more

Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Performs the conversion.

Performs the conversion.

The resulting type after obtaining ownership.

Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more

🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (toowned_clone_into)

recently added

Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more

Converts the given value to a String. Read more

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.