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The Kabouter (Dutch pronunciation: [kaːˈbʌutər] ⓘ) is a gnome-like creature in Dutch folklore. The Dutch Kabouters are akin to the Irish Leprechaun , Scandinavian Tomte or Nisse, the English Hob , [ 1 ] the Scottish Brownie [ 2 ] and the German Klabauter or kobold .
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Kabouter – (Dutch for gnome) short, strong workers. They build the first carillons (groups of bells) of the Netherlands – from The Kabouters and the Bells [19] Nuton - (Walloon for Kabouter but with similar linguistic roots to lutin). Nutons share the same origins as elves, but caves, caverns and underground tunnels form the bulk of their ...
Kabouter Wesley (English: Gnome Wesley) is a Flemish/Belgian series of comics and short animated cartoons about a grumpy and violent kabouter (), made by Jonas Geirnaert.Both the drawing style and the content are purposely made naive and amateurish and the situations are surreal and violent.
Kyrië, the Kabouter king from folklore from the Campine, a region in the Dutch province of North Brabant. Gnome king Kyrië (Dutch: Kabouterkoning Kyrië, pronounced [kaːˈbʌutərˌkoːnɪŋ ˈkiːrijə]) is, according to local folklore, the leader of the legendary gnomes who lived in the Campine region of the province of North Brabant, the Netherlands. [1]
Kabouter – Little people that live underground, in mushrooms, or as house spirits; Kachina (Hopi and Puebloan) – Nature spirit; Kahaku – Little people and water spirits; Kajsa (Scandinavian) – Wind spirit; Kalakeyas – Descendants of Kala; Kallikantzaroi – Grotesque, malevolent spirit; Kamaitachi – Wind spirit
Gnomes, originally published in Dutch in 1976 as Leven en werken van de kabouter (lit. ' Life and work of the gnomes ' [ 1 ] ), then released in English in 1977, is a fiction book written by Wil Huygen and illustrated by Rien Poortvliet .
The first book in his picture book series is Gnomes (published in 1977, and originally known as Leven en werken van de Kabouter in Dutch). It was on top of the bestseller list of the New York Times for over a year (as a book on folklore, it was categorized as non-fiction). [ 4 ]