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Abaia is a huge, magical eel in Melanesian mythology. [1] According to Melanesian mythology the Abaia is a type of large eel which dwells at the bottom of freshwater lakes in the Fiji, Solomon and Vanuatu Islands. The beast is said to consider all creatures in the lake its children and protects them furiously against anyone who would harm or ...
Huli jing or Kitsune or Kumiho – Fox spirits, like Fairies (China, Japan, Korea) Huodou – a large black dog that can emit flames from its mouth (China) Kludde - (Belgium) demon summoned from the ashes of witches taking the form of a black wolf with bat wings, a birds beak and bear claws. Has glowing eyes, shapeshifting abilities and great ...
Abaia: Eel: Melanesian Mythology: Fur-Bearing Trout: Trout: North America: a fictional creature native to the northern regions of North America. Ikaroa: Māori Mythology: A long fish said to have given birth to all the stars in the Milky Way or to be the Mother Goddess of all the stars. Jasconius: An enormous fish in the story of Saint Brendan ...
Adopt Me! revolves around adopting and caring for a variety of different types of pets, which hatch from eggs. [7] Specific eggs hatch different pets. A Starter Egg, which is given to a player when they begin to play for the first time, for example hatches only a dog or a cat. Some pets can only be purchased with Roblox ' s virtual currency ...
Hairy Eel Pond animal Pamital ravine, Canary Islands: Bunyip [11] Bahnyip Amphibious creature Australia Cadborosaurus [12] Caddy Sea animal Pacific Coast of North America Champ [13] Champy Lake monster Lake Champlain, North America Cryptid Whales [14] [15] Giglioli's Whale, Rhinoceros dolphin, High-finned sperm whale, Alula whale, Unidentified ...
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But when a girl to whom an ala is the godmother visits the ala with her mother, the ala eats them both because the mother talked about the strange things in her house. [ 3 ] That even a dead ala is bad is seen in the legend explaining the origin of the Golubatz fly ( Simulium colombaschense ), [ 16 ] a species of bloodsucking black fly (of the ...
The term tylwyth teg is first attested in a poem attributed to the 14th-century Dafydd ap Gwilym, in which the principal character gets perilously but comically lost while going to visit his girlfriend: "Hudol gwan yn ehedeg, / hir barthlwyth y Tylwyth Teg" ("(The) weak enchantment (now) flees, / (the) long burden of the Tylwyth Teg (departs) into the mist").