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Naga and his tribe of one-eyed violent mutants in the 1956 B-movie World Without End; Old One Eye, a unique Tyranid carnifex with the ability to rapidly regenerate from mortal wounds in Warhammer 40k; One-eyed, starfish-shaped aliens from the planet Paira in the 1956 Japanese film Warning from Space
An old man spirit with one eye and one leg, found in Shikoku. Yamako An ape-like occasionally-cannibalistic creature that can read minds. Yama-no-Kami The kami of mountains. There are two types: gods of the mountains who are worshipped by hunters, woodcutters, and charcoal burners or gods of agriculture who come down from the mountains and are ...
Imugi – Flightless, dragon-like creatures (sometimes thought of as proto-dragons) Inapertwa – Simple organisms, used by creator-gods to make everything else; Incubus (Medieval folklore) – Male night-demon and seducer; Indrik – One-horned horse-bull hybrid
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... Japanese legendary creatures (9 C, 53 P) D. Japanese deities (8 C ...
Yama-waro – Hairy, one-eyed spirit; Yanari – Spirit which causes strange noises; Yaoguai – Animalistic demon or fallen gods; Yara-ma-yha-who (Australian Aboriginal) – Diminutive, sucker-fingered vampire; Yatagarasu – Three-legged crow of Amaterasu; Yato-no-kami – Serpent spirits
Hitotsume-kozō – one-eyed childlike spirit; Hob – house spirit; Hobbididance – malevolent spirit; Hobgoblin – friendly or amusing goblin; Hodag (United States) – frog-mammoth-lizard hybrid; Hokhokw – bird; Hōkō – dog-like Chinese tree spirit; Hó͘-ko͘-pô – a tiger spirit
Jinn (Arabian, Islamic) – Spiritual creatures; genii; Jipijka'm – Underwater horned snake; lives in lakes and eats humans; Jiufeng – Nine-headed bird worshiped by ancient natives in Hubei Province. Jiu tou niao – Nine-headed, demonic bird; Jogah – Little people nature spirit; Jörmungandr – Sea serpent
The artwork of xxxHolic is influenced by the Ukiyo-e art style. A notable theme of the work, which recurs in other Clamp works, is the use of one-eyed or blind characters to express a feeling of loneliness and perhaps parallel Nanase Ohkawa's own poor right-eye vision. [1]