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It includes ghosts that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Ghosts and spirits of dead girls or women in folklore , legends , and mythology . Note that this category is also inclusive of all kinds of undead women besides ghosts; including revenants , vampires , or zombies .
Download as PDF; Printable version ... the Ravenloft campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role ... their ghosts haunted him for a year he killed ...
Laistrygones – Ancient Greece, also under the names of: Laestrygones; Laistrygonians; Laestrygonians; La Llorona – Central America and the United States; Lamashtu – Mesopotamia; Lamia – Libya; Lampire – Bosnia [citation needed] Langsuir – Malaysia, also under the names of: Langsuyar; Pontianak; Kuntilanak; Leanashe – Ireland ...
Emily, the ghost of a young girl who supposedly haunts a covered bridge in Stowe, Vermont. The bridge is dubbed "Emily's Bridge" and she is said to be seen only at midnight; Oscar Washburn, the ghost of a black goat farmer who allegedly haunts Old Alton Bridge in Copper Canyon, Texas. He is commonly known as "the Goatman" as he is said to ...
Ghosts of Saltmarsh is an anthology of updated modules and adventures from previous editions, including three adventures from the classic 'U' series. The modules are modified to use the 5th edition rules, so that the adventures can be played in the order they are presented in the book, or dropped into a home campaign.
She came back as a ghost to search for her father, and now every year on her marriage night you can hear her scream. [25] [26] [27] People also report sightings of a female dubbed "the woman in the white dress" or "an bhean bhán" (the white woman) in an abandoned house next to the white river in Dunleer, Co. Louth.
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The dialectologist Elizabeth Wright described the boggart as 'a generic name for an apparition'; [1] folklorist Simon Young defines it as 'any ambivalent or evil solitary supernatural spirit'. [2] Halifax folklorist Kai Roberts states that boggart ‘might have been used to refer to anything from a hilltop hobgoblin to a household faerie, from ...