| E. Cobham Brewer 18101897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898. |
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good and bad. | 1 |
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| AFREET or EFREET, one of the Jinn tribe, of which there are five. (See Story of the Second Calendar.) |
| APPARITION. A ghost. |
| ARIEL. (See ARIEL.) |
| BANSHEE or BENSHEE, an Irish fairy attached to a house. (See BANSHEE.) |
| BOGGART. (Scotch.) A local hobgoblin or spirit. |
| BOGIE or BOGLE, a bugbear (Scotch form of bug). (See BOGIE.) |
| BROWNIE, a Scotch domestic fairy; the servants friend if well treated. (See BROWNIE.) |
| BUG or BUGBEAR, any imaginary thing that frightens a person. (Welsh, bwg.) (See BUG.) |
| CAULD LAD (The), the Brownie of Hilton Hall. (See CAULD LAD.) |
| DJINN, JIN, or GINN (Arabian). (See JIXX.) |
| DUENDE (3 syl.), a Spanish house-spirit. (See DUENDE.) |
| DWARF, a diminutive being human or superhuman. (Anglo-Saxon, dweorg.) |
| DWERGER, DWERGUGH, or DUERGAR, Gotho-German dwarfs, dwelling in rocks and hills. (Anglo-Saxon, dweorgh.) |
| ELF (plu. ELVES), fairies of diminutive size, supposed to be fond of practical jokes. (Anglo-Saxon, lf.) (See ELF.) |
| ELLE-MAID or ELLE-WOMAN, ELLE-FOLK, of Scandinvia. |
| ESPRIT FOLLET, the house-spirit of France. |
| FAIRY or FAERIE (plu. FAIRIES), a super-natural being, fond of pranks, but generally pleasing. (German and French, fee.) |
| FAMILIAR (A), an evil spirit attendant on witches, etc. (See FAMILIAR.) |
| FATA, an Italian fay, or white lady. |
FATES, the three spirits (Clotho, Lach sis, and Atr pos) which preside over the destiny of every individual. (Latin, fata.) |
| FAY (plu. FAYS), same as Fairy (q.v.). |
| FEAR DEARG (The), i.e. Red Man. A house-spirit of Munster. |
| GEXII (plu.). The sing. genie and genius. Eastern spirits, whether good or bad, who preside over a man or nation. He is my evil [or good] genius. (Latin, genius.) (See GENIUS.) |
GHOST, the immaterial body or noumenon of a human being. Supposed to be free to visit the earth at night-time, but obliged to return to its Had s at the first dawn. |
| GHOUL, a demon that feeds on the dead. (Persian.) |
GNOME (1 syl.), the guardian of mines, quarries, etc. (Greek,     , a Cabalistic being.) (See GNOMES.) |
| GOBLIN or HORGOBLIN, a phantom spirit. (French, gobelin; German, kobold.) |
| GOOD FOLK. (The). The Brownies or house-spirits. |
| GUARDIAN-ANGEL, an angelic spirit which presides over the destiny of each individual. |
| HABUNDIA, queen of the White Ladies. |
| HAG (A), a female fury. Milton (Comus 445) speaks of blue meagre hags. |
| HAMADRYAD, a wood-nymph. Each tree has its own wood-nymph, who dies when the tree dies. |
| HOBGOBLIN. (See above, GOBLIN.) Hob is Robin, as Hodge is Roger. |
| HORNS or HORNIE, the Devil. (See HORNIE.) |
| IMP, a puny demon or spirit of mischief. (Welsh, imp.) |
| JACK-A-LANTERN, a bog or marsh spirit who delights to mislead |
| JINN or GINN, (See JINN.) These Arabian spirits were formed of smokeless fire. |
| KELPIE (2 syl.). In Scotland, an imaginary spirit of the waters in the form of a horse. (See KELPIE.) |
| KOBOLD, a German household goblin, also frequenting mines. (German, kobold.) (See KOBOLD.) |
| LAMIA (plu. LAMLÆ), a hag or demon. Keatss Lamia is a serpent which had assumed the form of a beautiful woman, beloved by a young man, and gets a soul. (Latin, Lamia.) (See LAMIA.) |
| LAMIES, African spectres, having the head of a woman and tail of a serpent. (See LAMIES.) |
| LAR (plu. LARES) (2 syl.), Latin household deitles. (See LARES.) |
| LEPRECHAUN, a fairy shoemaker. |
| MAB, the farles midwife. Sometimes incorrectly called queen of the fairies. (Welsh, mab.) (See MAB.) |
| MANDRAKE. (See MANDRAKE.) |
| MERMAID, a sea-spirit, the upper part a woman and the lower half a fish. |
| MERROWS, both male and female, are spirits of the sea, of human shape from the waist upwards, but from the waist downwards are like a fish. The females are attractive, but the males have green teeth, green hair, pigs eyes, and red noses. Fishermen dread to meet them. |
| MONACIELLO or LITTLE MONK, a house-spirit of Naples. |
| NAIAD (plu. NAIADES [3 syl.] or NAIADS [2 syl.]), water-nymphs. (Latin.) (See NAIADS.) |
| NIS or NISSE (2 syl.), a Kobold or Brownie. A Scandinavian fairy friendly to farmhouses. (Contraction of Nicolaus.) |
| NIX (female, NIXIE), a water-spirit. The nix has green teeth, and wears a green hat: the nicie is very beautiful. |
| OSERON, king of the fairies. |
| OGRE [pronounce ogr], an inhabitant of fairyland said to feed on infant children. (French.) |
| ORENDS, mountain nymphs. (Greek, oros.) |
| OUPHE (2 syl.), a fairy or goblin, |
| PERI, a Persian fairy. Evil peris are called Deevs. |
| PIGWIDGEON, a fairy of very diminutive size. |
| PIXY or PIXIE (also pisgy, pisgie), a Devonshire fairy, same as Puck. |
| POUKE (1 syl.), same as Puck. (See POUKE.) |
| PUCK, a merry little fairy spirit, full of fun and harmless mischief. (Icelandic and Swedish, puke.) (See PUCK.) |
| ROBIN-GOODFELLOW, another name for PUCK.) (See ROBIN
.) |
| SALAMANDER, a spirit which lives in fire. (Latin and Greek, salamandra.) (See SALAMANDRA.) |
| SHADES, ghosts. |
| SPECTRE, a ghost. |
| SPOOK (in Theosophy), an elemental. |
| SPRITE, a spirit. |
| STROMKARL, a Norwegian musical spirit, like Neck. (See STROMKARL.) |
| SYLPH, a spirit of the air; so named by the Rosicrucians and Cabalists. (Greek, silphe; French, sylphids.) (See SYLPHS.) |
| TRITON, a sea deity, who dwells with Father Neptune in a golden palace at the bottom of the sea. The chief employment of tritons is to blow a conch to smooth the sea when it is ruffied. |
| TROLL, a hill-spirit. Hence Trolls are called Hill-people or Hill-folk, supposed to be immensely rich, and especially dislike noise. (See TROLLS.) |
| UNDINE (2 syl.), a water-nymph. (Latin, unda.) (See UNDINE.) |
| URCHIN properly means a hedgehog, and is applied to mischievous children and small folk generally. (See URCHIN.) |
| VAMPIRE (2 syl.), the spirit of a dead man that haunts a house and sucks the blood of the living. A Hungarian superstition. (See VAMPIRE.) |
| WERE-WOLF (Anglo-Saxon, wer-wulf, manwolf), a human being, sometimes in one form and sometimes in another. (See WERE-WOLF.) |
| WHITE LADIES OF, NORMANDY. (See WHITE LADIES.) |
| WHITE LADY (The) of the royal family of Prussia. A spirit said to appear before the death of one of the family. (See WHITE LADY.) |
| WHITE LADY OF AVENEL (2 syl.), a tutelary spirit. |
| WHITE LADY OF IRELAND (The), the banshee or domestic spirit of a family. |
| WHITE MERLE (The), of the old Basques. A white fairy bird, which, by its singing, restored sight to the blind. |
| WIGHT, any human creature, as a Highland wight. Dwarfs and all other fairy creatures. |
| WILL-O-THE-WISP, a spirit of the bogs, whose delight is to mislead belated travellers. |
| WRAITH (Scotch), the ghost of a person shortly about to die or just dead, which appears to survivors, sometimes at a great distance off. (See WRAITH, HOUSEHOLD SPIRITS.) | |
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