/// (Malay) – Entity that lives in the Tower of Victory in Chitor.
ABaoAQu
/// (Basque) – Bull spirit.
Aatxe
/// (Yakuts) – Iron-toothed demons.
Abaasy
/// (African) – Unicorn that inhabits the African Congo.
Abada
/// (Tatar) – Forest spirit. (Melanesia) – Huge magical eel.
Abaia
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Savage humanoid with backward feet.
Abarimon
/// (Malay) – One-horned animal.
Abath
/// (Japanese) – Creature from a mountain pass in Kumamoto Prefecture.
AburaSumashi
/// (Greek) – Headless humanoids.
Acephali
/// (Mitologia Hindu) – Disease-bringing ghost.
Acheri
/// (Roman) – Curious elk.
Achlis
/// (Welsh) – Giant birds that understand human languages.
AdarLlwchGwin
/// (Solomon Islands) – Malevolent merfolk.
Adaro
/// (Manx) – Nature spirit.
Adhene
/// (Inuit) – Vampiric dog-human hybrid
Adlet
/// (Lugbara) – Nature spirit.
Adroanzi
/// (Ewe people) – African vampiric-forest being.
Adze
/// (Greek) – Disease demon.
Aerico
/// (Norse) – Norse deities.
AEsir
/// (Welsh) – Lake monster (exact lake varies by story).
Afanc
/// (Hindu) – God of fire and sacrifices.
Agni
/// (Greek) – Spirit of vinefields and grainfields.
Agathodaemon
/// (Inuit) – Ice spirit that aids hunters and fishermen.
Agloolik
/// (East Africa) – Small, ape-like humanoid.
Agogwe
/// (Inuit) – Animated skeleton that causes shipwrecks.
Ahkiyyini
/// (Aztec) – Anthropophagous dog-monkey hybrid.
Ahuizotl
/// (Zoroastrianism) – Zoroastrian spirits.
Ahura
/// (Khoikhoi) – Anthropophagous humanoid with eyes in its instep.
Aigamuxa
/// (Etruscan) – Fish-tailed goat.
Aigikampoi
/// (Hindu) – Divine elephant.
Airavata
/// (Polynesian) – Malevolent spirits or demons.
Aitu
/// (Lithuanian) – Household spirit.
Aitvaras
/// (Finnish) – Dragon/snake female spirit, is said to spread diseases
Ajatar
/// (Japanese) – Tree-dwelling monster.
Akateko
/// (Inuit) – Orca-wolf shapeshifter.
Akhlut
/// (Finnish) – Female spirits or minor goddesses.
Akka
/// (Japanese) – Large, grotesque humanoid.
Akki
/// (Ainu) – Sea monster.
Akkorokamui
/// (Japanese) – Evil spirit or devil
Akuma
/// (Hindu) – Giant turtle that supports the world.
Akupara
/// (Japanese) – Ghostly flame which causes disease.
AkurojinNoHi
/// (Armenian and Persian) – Spirit that steals unborn babies and livers from pregnant women.
Al
/// (Slavic) – Bad weather demon.
Ala
/// (Chaldean) – Queen of the full moon.
Alal
/// (Philippine) – Winged humanoid that steals reproductive waste to make children.
Alan
/// (Heraldic) – Wingless griffin.
Alce
/// (Bengali) – Spirit of a dead fisherman.
Aleya
/// (Chilean) – Bird that eats gold and silver.
Alicanto
/// (Bestiario medieval) – Winged unicorn.
Alicorn
/// (Slavic) – Angelic bird with human head and breasts.
Alkonost
/// (Heraldic) – Ass-camel hybrid.
Allocamelus
/// (Mongolian) – Savage humanoid.
Almas
/// (Islamic) – One-horned rabbit.
AlMiRaj
/// (Catalan) – Female water spirit.
Aloja
/// (Abenaki) – Little people and tricksters.
AlomBagWinnosis
/// (German) – Male night-demon.
Alp
/// (Heraldic) – Lion-like creature, sometimes with dragon or goat forelegs.
Alphyn
/// (Irish) – Parasitic fairy.
AlpLuachra
/// (Islamic) – Guard dog of the Seven Sleepers.
AlRakim
/// (Greek) – Grove nymph.
Alseid
/// (Assyrian) – Leprous demon.
Alu
/// (Mayan) – Little people.
Alux
/// (Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from Shikoku.
Amaburakosagi
/// (Tsimshian) – Giant who holds up the world.
Amala
/// (Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from Hokuriku.
Amamehagi
/// (Japanese) – Small demon.
Amanojaku
/// (Inuit) – Giant wolf.
Amarok
/// (Quechua) – Water boa spirit.
Amarum
/// (Japanese) – Disease-causing hag.
AmazakeBabaa
/// (Ainu) – Lake monster.
Amemasu
/// (Ancient Egyptian) – Female demon who was part lion, hippopotamus and crocodile and devoured the souls of the wicked.
Ammit
/// (Japanese) – Tennyo from the island of Amami Ōshima.
Amoronagu
/// (Heraldic) – Winged serpent.
Amphiptere
/// (Greek) – Serpent with a head at each end.
Amphisbaena
/// (Jewish) – Giant.
Anak
/// (Ancient Egyptian) – Human-headed sphinx.
Androsphinx
/// (mainly Christian, Jewish, Islamic traditions) – Divine beings of Heaven who act as mediators between God and humans; the counterparts of Demons.
Angel
/// (Arabian) – Legendary Huge Satanic Eagle with Human Face. sometimes can resurrect herself like phoenix did.
Anqa
/// (Cherokee) – Lightning spirit.
AniHyuntikwalaski
/// (French) – Skeletal grave watcher with a lantern and scythe.
Ankou
/// (Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from Iwate Prefecture.
Anmo
/// (Greek) – Giant who was extremely strong as long as he remained in contact with the ground.
Antaeus
/// (Ancient Egyptian) – God of the Underworld
Anubis
/// (Finnish) – Subterranean giant.
AnteroVipunen
/// (Sumerian) – Divine storm bird
Anzu
/// (Guaraní) – Anthropophagous peccary or sheep.
AoAo
/// (Japanese) – Blue monk who kidnaps children.
Aobozu
/// (Sumerian) – Fish-human hybrid that attends the god Enki.
Apkallu
/// (Buddhist and Hindu) – Female cloud spirit.
Apsaras
/// (Akkadian) – Human-scorpion hybrid.
Aqrabuamelu
/// (Akkadian) – Disease demon.
ArdatLili
/// (Greek) – Hundred-eyed giant.
ArgusPanoptes
/// (Japanese) – Old woman with magical powers.
ArikuraNoBaba
/// (Greek) – One-eyed humanoid.
Arimaspi
/// (Greek) – Swift green-maned talking horse.
Arion
/// (Manx) – Fairy hedgehog.
ArkanSonney
/// (Sumerian) – Hideous rock demon.
Asag
/// (Sumerian) – Demon.
Asakku
/// (West Africa) – Iron-toothed vampire.
Asanbosam
/// (Turkic) – Blue-maned wolf.
Asena
/// (Abenaki) – Stone giant.
ASeneeKiWakw
/// (Japanese) – Invisible tendril that impedes movement.
AshiMagari
/// (Dahomey) – Vampiric possession spirit.
Asiman
/// (Germanic) – Female tree spirit.
Askefrue
/// (Abenaki) – Fire elemental and spectral fire.
AskWeeDaEed
/// (Japanese) – Spectral fire from Kōchi Prefecture.
Asobibi
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Island-sized whale or sea turtle.
Aspidochelone
/// (English) – Water spirit.
Asrai
/// (Greek) – Humanoid sustained by pleasant smells instead of food.
Astomi
/// (Hindu) – Hindu malevolent divinities.
Asura
/// (Philippine) – Carrion-eating humanoid.
Aswang
/// (English) – Surprisingly small creature.
Atomy
/// (Japanese) – Invisible spirit that follows people.
AtoOiKozo
/// (Inuit) – Anthropophagous spirit.
Atshen
/// (Greek) – Pasture nymph.
Auloniad
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – King of the birds.
Avalerion
/// (Abenaki) – Insect spirit.
AwaHonDo
/// (Ancient Egyptian) – Falcon-lion hybrid.
Axex
/// (Japanese) – Sea serpent that travels over boats in an arc while dripping oil.
Ayakashi
/// (Japanese) – Spectral fire from Ishikawa Prefecture.
AyakashiNoAyashibi
/// (Dahomey) – Little people that help hunters.
Aziza
/// (Japanese) – Spirit that washes azuki beans along riversides.
Azukiarai
/// (Japanese) – Spirit that washes azuki beans along riversides.
Azukitogi
/// (Japanese) – Bean-grinding hag who devours people.
Azukibabaa
/// (Egyptian) – Soul of the deceased, depicted as a bird or a human-headed bird
Ba
/// (Slavic) – Forest spirit and hag
BabaYaga
/// (Guyanese/Surinamese) – Malevolent little people
Baccoo
/// (Italian) – Goat-like creature from the southern central Alps
Badalisc
/// (Slavic) – Malevolent water spirit
Bagiennik
/// (Arabian) – Giant fish
Bahamut
/// (Chinese) – Talking beast which handed down knowledge on harmful spirits
BaiZe
/// (Chinese) – Banana tree spirit
BaJiaoGui
/// (Indian) - Assamese shape-shifting aqueous creature
Bak
/// (Japanese) – Ghostly whale skeleton that drifts along the coastline of Shimane Prefecture
BakeKujira
/// (Japanese) – Magical cat
Bakeneko
/// (Japanese) – Animated straw sandal
Bakezori
/// (Iranian) – Night demon
Bakhtak
/// (Japanese) – Dream-devouring, tapir-like creature
Baku
/// (Philippine) – Sea serpent that causes eclipses
Bakunawa
/// (Romanian) – Multi-headed dragon
Balaur
/// (Albanian) – Sea monster
Baloz
/// (Slavic) – Bathhouse spirit
Bannik
/// (Irish) – Screaming death spirit
Banshee
/// (Celtic Mythology) – Beautiful vampiric seductresses who prey on young travelers
BaobhanSith
/// (Swiss) – Dwarf with giant, snowshoe-like feet
Barbegazi
/// (Albanian) – Mountain spirit
Bardha
/// (Trabzon) – Shapechanging death spirit
Bardi
/// Yorkshire black dog
Barghest
/// (Jewish) – Gigantic bird
BarJuchne
/// (Medieval folklore) – Geese which hatch from barnacles
BarnacleGeese
/// (Balinese) – Tutelary spirit
Barong
/// (Basque) – Ancestral, megalith-building race
Basajaun
/// (Serbian) – Powerful, evil winged man whose soul is not held by his body and can be subdued only by causing him to suffer dehydration
BasCelik
/// (Chinese) – Elephant-swallowing serpent
Bashe
/// (Chilota) – Chicken-serpent hybrid
BasiliscoChilote
/// (Italian) – Multi-limbed, venomous lizard
Basilisk
/// (Philippine) – Primordial god of creation
Bathala
/// (Philippine) – Female night-demon
Batibat
/// (Chinese) – Drought spirit
Batsu
/// (Lithuanian) – Malevolent spirit
Baubas
/// (Ojibwa) – Flying skeleton
Baykok
/// (American Folklore) – Werewolf
BeastOfBrayRoad
/// (Irish) – Death spirit; a type of Banshee/Bean Sídhe)
BeanNighe
/// (Jewish) – Massive beast, possibly like a dinosaur
Behemoth
/// (Welsh) – Giant king
Bendigeidfran
/// (Egyptian) – Heron-like, regenerative bird, equivalent to (or inspiration for) the Phoenix
Bennu
/// (Slavic) – Water spirit
Berehynia
/// (Norse) – Mountain giants who live alongside the Hrimthursar (lit. "Rime-Giants") in Jotunheim
Bergrisar
/// (Norse) – Mountain spirit
Bergsra
/// (Brazilian) – Centauroid specter
BestialBeast
/// (Japanese) – Invisible spirit which follows people at night, making the sound of footsteps
BetobetoSan
/// (Buddhist and Hindu) – Ghost of someone killed by execution or suicide
Bhuta
/// (Khoikhoi) – Female, cannibalistic, partially invisible monster
BiBlouk
/// (Slavic) – Demon
Bies
/// (American Folklore) – Forest-dwelling hominid cryptid.
Bigfoot
/// (Japanese) – Spirit of poverty
Binbogami
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Fish-like humanoid
BishopFish
/// (Japanese) – Animated biwa
BiwaBokuboku
/// (English) – Blue-faced hag
BlackAnnis
/// (British) – Canine death spirit
BlackDog
/// Norfolk, Essex, and Suffolk black dog
BlackShuck
/// Imaginary creature from the early United States of America
Blafard
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Headless humanoid with face in torso
Blemmyae
/// (Irish) – Water bogeyman
BloodyBones
/// (Slavic) – Mischievous gnome
Bludnik
/// (Brazilian) – Giant amazonian bird
BlueCrow
/// (English) – Mine-dwelling fairy
Bluecap
/// (Scottish) – Malevolent spirit
Bodach
/// (English) – Malevolent spirit
Bogeyman
/// (English) – Malevolent household spirit
Boggart
/// (Slavic) – Nature spirit
Boginki
/// (Scottish) – Malevolent spirit
Bogle
/// (Brazilian) – Giant snake
BoiTata
/// (Albanian) – Dragon
Bolla
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Bull-horse hybrid with flaming dung
Bonnacon
/// (American Folklore) – Vampire-like creature that steals energy from sleeping victims
BooHag
/// (Scottish) – Roaring water bird
Boobrie
/// (Slavic) – Death spirit
Bozaloshtsh
/// (English) – Malevolent water horse
Brag
/// (English and Scottish) – Benevolent household spirit
Brownie
/// (Jewish) – Nocturnal bird that drains goats of their milk
Broxa
/// (Cornish) – Male sea-spirit, a merman, that inhabited mines and coastal communities as a hobgoblin during storms
Bucca
/// (Dutch) – Ghosts/devils riding flying goats; co-opted by bandits to instil fear during raids
Bokkenrijders
/// (English) – Bearlike goblin
Bugbear
/// (Manx) – Ogre-like humanoid
Buggane
/// (Celtic) – Extremely ugly, but kind, forest spirit
BugulNoz
/// (Serbia) – Six-legged lake monster
Bukavac
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – Horse-walrus hybrid lake monster
Bunyip
/// (American Folklore) West Virginia Urban Legend – Spirit/Maniac that wears a bunny costume and wields an axe
BunnyMan
/// (Guyanese) – Spirit that seduces and kills men
BushDaiDai
/// (Bengali) – Fortune-telling birds
Byangoma
/// (Scandinavian) – Diminutive forest spirit
Bysen
/// (Greek) – Smith and wine spirit
Cabeiri
/// (Roman) – Fire-breathing giant
Cacus
/// (Central America) – Cow-sized dog-goat hybrid
Cadejo
/// (Scottish) – Divine creator and weather deity hag
Cailleach
/// (Tupi) – Fox-human hybrid and nature spirit
Caipora
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – White bird that can foretell if a sick person will recover or die
Caladrius
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Humanoid with an eight-year lifespan
Calingi
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Apes who always bear twins, one the mother loves, the other it hates
Callitrix
/// (Greek) – Giant, chthonic boar
CalydonianBoar
/// (Heraldic) – Wildcat-deer/antelope-eagle-ox-lion hybrid :>
Calygreyhound
/// (Chilota) – One-horned calf
Camahueto
/// (Medieval folklore) – Offspring of a human and an incubus or succubus
Cambion
/// (Greek) – Dragon-human-scorpion hybrid
Campe
/// (Mayan) – Bird that ate the heads of the first men
Camulatz
/// (Colombian) – Spectral, fiery hag
Candileja
/// (Guyanese) – Were-jaguar
Canaima
/// (Lakota) – Little people and tree spirits
Canotila
/// (Scottish) – Death spirit (a particular type of Banshee/Bean Sídhe)
Caoineag
/// (Lakota) – Beaver spirit
Chapa
///(Manipuri)-Semi-hornbill, semi-human creature
Chareng
/// (Romanian) – Large, monstrous humanoid
Capcaun
/// (Latin America) – Small creature with a jewel on its head
Carbuncle
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Scaled buffalo-hog hybrid
Catoblepas
/// (Scottish) – Fairy cat
CatSidhe
/// (Scottish) — Benevolent Scottish mermaids
Ceasg
/// (Welsh) – Malevolent water horse
CeffylDwr
/// (Greek) – Human-horse hybrid
Centaur
/// (Indian) – Horse-Antelope-Lion-Bear hybrid
Centicore
/// (Greek) – Extremely flexible, horned snake
Cerastes
/// (Greek) – Three-headed dog that guards the entrance to the underworld
Cerberus
/// (Greek) – Mischievous forest spirit
Cercopes
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Apes who always bear twins, one the mother loves, the other it hates
Cericopithicus
/// (Greek) – Hind with golden antlers and bronze or brass hooves
CeryneianHind
/// (Lakota) – Hawk spirit
Cetan
/// (Greek) The Cetus was variously described as a sea monster or sea serpent. Other versions describe Cetus as a monster with the head of a boar or a greyhound and the body of a whale or dolphin, and a divided, fan-like tail. Cetus was said to be a colossal beast the size of a ship, its skull alone measuring 40 feet (12.2 meters) in length, its spines being a cubit in thickness, and its skeleton taller at the shoulder than an elephant.
Cetus
/// (Hindu) – Lunar bird
Chakora
/// (Apocryphal writings) – Angelic birds
Chalkydri
/// (Persian) – Dog-bird hybrid
Chamrosh
/// (Aztec) – Little people and nature spirits
Chaneque
/// (European) – Humanoid child (fairy, elf, troll, etc.) substituted for a kidnapped human child
Changeling
/// (Greek) – Sea monster in the form of a giant mouth
Charybdis
/// (Mi'kmaq/Algonquian) – Giant, human-eating ice monsters; former humans who either committed terrible crime(s) or were possessed by evil spirits, turning their hearts to ice
Chenoo
/// (Narragansett) – Ancestral spirit that instructs tribe members
Chepi
/// (Mapuche) – Volcano-dwelling monster
Cherufe
/// (French) – Evil horse who runs away with travelers
ChevalMallet
/// (French) – Evil horse who drowns riders, similar to kelpie
ChevalGauvin
/// (Abenaki) – Ghost of an improperly buried person
Chibaiskweda
/// Human-faced cow that feeds on good women
Chichevache
/// (Bahamian) – Bird-mammal hybrid
Chickcharney
/// (Greek) – Lion-goat-snake hybrid
Chimaera
/// (Navajo) – Vengeful ghost that causes dust devils
Chindi
/// (Burmese) – Temple-guarding feline, similar to Chinese Shi and Japanese Shisa
Chinthe
/// (Zulu) – Human-lizard hybrid
Chitauli
/// (Japanese) – Animated paper lantern
Chochinobake
/// (Biblical mythology) – Regenerative bird
Chol
/// (Korean) – Supernaturally fast horse
Chollima
/// (Mapuche) – Disembodied, flying head
Chonchon
/// (Guyanese) – Ghost of a woman that died in childbirth
Choorile
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Hairy savage with dog teeth
Chromandi
/// (Greek) – The giant son of the gorgon Medusa.
Chrysaor
/// (Greek mythology) – Golden winged ram
Chrysomallus
/// (Hindu) – Giant turtle that supports the world
Chukwa
/// (Latin America) – Cryptid beast named for its habit of sucking the blood of livestock
Chupacabra
/// (Hindu) – Vampiric, female ghost
Churel
/// (Dominican Republic) – Malevolent seductress
Ciguapa
/// (Aztec) – Ghost of women that died in childbirth
Cihuateteo
/// (Serbian) – Bird that serves its owner
Cikavac
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Giant bird that makes its nest out of cinnamon
CinnamonBird
/// (Aztec) – Sea monster, crocodile-fish hybrid
Cipactli
/// (Scottish) – Sea serpent
CireinCroin
/// (Welsh) – Little people and mine spirits
Coblynau
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Chicken-lizard hybrid
Cockatrice
/// (English) – Cove god
Cofgod
/// (Greek) – Bronze-hoofed bulls
ColchisBull
/// (Mapuche) – Rat-bird hybrid that can shapeshift into a serpent
ColoColo
/// (Greek) – Nymph of the Corycian Cave
CorycianNymphs
/// (Greek) – Monstrous bull
CretanBull
/// (Greek) – Fountain nymph
Crinaeae
/// (Ancient Egypt) – Ram-headed sphinx
Criosphinx
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Monstrous dog-wolf
Crocotta
/// (Mexican) – El Pájaro Cu; a bird.
TheCuBird
/// (Latin America) – Bogeyman
Cuco
/// (Latin America) – Malevolent spirit
Cucuy
/// (Cantabrian) – Monstrous, three-armed humanoid
Cuegle
/// (Asturian and Cantabrian) – Dragon
Cuelebre
/// (Tupi) – Nature spirit
Curupira
/// (Scottish) – Gigantic fairy dog
CuSith
/// (Welsh) – Underworld hunting dog
CwnAnnwn
/// (Greek) – One-eyed giant
Cyclops
/// (Welsh) – Death spirit
Cyhyraeth
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Dog-headed humanoid
Cynocephalus
/// (Greek) – Little people and smith and healing spirits
Dactyl
/// (Greek) – Incorporeal spirit
Daemon
/// (France, Switzerland and the north of Italy) – Similar to a deer or ibex; legs on one side of its body are shorter than on the other side
Dahu
/// (Japanese) – Giant responsible for creating many geographical features in Japan
Daidarabotchi
/// (Japanese) – Most powerful class of tengu, each of whom lives on a separate mountain
Daitengu
/// (Hindu) – Giant
Daitya
/// (Hindu) – Water demon
Danava
/// (Greek) – Laurel tree nymph
Daphnaie
/// (Japanese) – Old woman who steals clothes from the souls of the dead
DatsueBa
/// (Islamic) – Human tribe turned into apes for ignoring Moses' message
DeadSeaApes
/// (Russia) – A winter spirit who delivers gifts to children on New Year's Eve
DedMoroz
/// (Native American) – Human-deer hybrid
DeerWoman
/// (Global) – Preternatural or supernatural possibly immortal being
Deity
/// (Global) – Half human, half god
Demigod
/// (Balkans) – Human/vampire hybrid
Dhampir
/// (Chinese) – Hanged ghost
DiaoSiGui
/// (Chinese) – Earth dragon
Dilong
/// (Catalan) – Demonic and vampiric dog
Dip
/// (Roman) – House spirit
DiPenates
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Extremely venomous snake
Dipsa
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – Goanna spirit
Dirawong
/// (Gotland) – Little people and nature spirits
DiSmaUndarJordi
/// (Philippine) – Tree spirit
Diwata
/// (Albanian) – Devil
Djall
/// (Irish) – King otter
DobharChu
/// (Abenaki) – Little people
DoGakwHoWad
/// (Korean) – Grotesque, horned humanoids
Dokkaebi
/// (Norse) – Male ancestral spirits; the Dark Elves
Dokkalfar
/// (Slavic) – Tutelary and fate spirit
Dola
/// (Slavic) – House spirit
Domovoi
/// (German) – Ghostly double
Doppelganger
/// (Catalan) – Lion or bull-faced dragon
/// (French) – Winged sea serpent
Drac
/// (Greek) – Greek dragons
Drakon
/// (Greek) – Dragons depicted with female characteristics
Drakaina
/// (Many cultures worldwide) – Fire-breathing and,/// (normally) winged reptiles
Dragon
/// (Chinese) – Giant turtle with dragon-like head
DragonTurtle
/// (Albanian) – Semi-human winged warriors
Drangue
/// (Norse) – Undead
Draugr
/// (Slavic) – Restless ghost of an unbaptised child
Drekavac
/// (Australian) – Large carnivorous koala that hunts by dropping on its prey from trees
DropBear
/// (Scottish) – Cavern spirit
Drow
/// (German) – Possessing demon
Drude
/// (Bhutanese) – Dragon
Druk
/// (Greek) – Tree nymph
Dryad
/// (Spanish and Portuguese) – Little people and forest spirits
Duende
/// (English) – Malevolent little people
Duergar
/// (Irish) – Headless death spirit
Dullahan
/// (Philippine) – Little people, some are house spirits, others nature spirits
Duwende
/// (Norse) – Subterranean little people smiths
Dvergr
/// (Slavic) – Courtyard spirit
Dvorovoi
/// (Germanic) – Little people nature spirits
Dwarf
/// (Jewish) – Spirit,/// (sometimes the soul of a wicked deceased) that possesses the living
Dybbuk
/// (Abenaki) – Hideous monster
DzeeDzeeBonDa
/// (Kwakwaka'wakw) – Child-eating hag
Dzunukwa
/// (Christianity) – Anthropomorphic lagomorph.
EasterBunny
/// (Australian) – Anthropomorphic bilby.
EasterBilby
/// (Scottish) – Malevolent water horse
EachUisge
/// (Many cultures worldwide) – Leadership or guidance totem
EagleSpirit
/// (Flores) – Diminutive humanoids, possibly inspired by Homo floresiensis
EbuGogo
/// (Greek)
Echidna
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Remora, said to attach to ships to slow them down
Echeneis
/// (Sumerian) – Ghosts of those not buried properly
Edimmu
/// (Yoruba) – Humanoid that carries a magical mat
Egbere
/// (Norse)
Eikthyrnir
/// (Norse) – Spirits of brave warriors
Einherjar
/// (Philippine) – Flesh-eating, winged humanoids
Ekek
/// (Ojibwa) – Hags with awls in their elbows
ElbowWitch
/// (Norse) – Fire Giants who reside in Muspelheim, with Surtr as their leader
Eldjotnar
/// (Greek) – Marsh nymph
Eleionomae
/// (Alchemy) – Personification of one of the Classical elements
Elemental
/// (Hawaiian) – Monarch flycatcher spirit that guides canoe-builders to the proper trees
Elepaio
/// (Germanic) – Nature and fertility spirit
Elf
/// (Central Africa) – Little people and malevolent nature spirits
Eloko
/// (Yoruba) – Child that can move back and forth between the material world and the afterlife at will
Emere
/// (Jewish) – Giant
Emim
/// (Greek) – Female demon that waylays travelers and seduces and kills men
Empusa
/// (Brazilian) – Dolphin-human shapeshifter
Encantado
/// (Portuguese) – Enchanted princesses
EnchantedMoor
/// (Heraldic) – Fox-greyhound-lion-wolf-eagle hybrid
Enfield
/// (Philippine) – Neutral nature spirit
Engkanto
/// (Japanese) – Kappa of Shikoku and western Honshū
Enko
/// (worldwide/fantasy) -Living tree that is said to live for years
Ent
/// (Greek) – Apple tree nymph
Epimeliad
/// (Sardinia) – Ox-human, wereox
Erchitu
/// (Chinese) – Hungry ghost
ErGui
/// (Greek) – Winged spirits of vengeance or justice, also known as Furies
Erinyes
/// (German) – Death spirit
Erlking
/// (Greek) – Giant boar
ErymanthianBoar
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Horned, winged horse
EthiopianPegasus
/// (Finnish mythology) – Spirit being of a living person
Etiainen
/// (English) – Three-headed giant
Ettin
/// (Greek) – Blue-black, carrion-eater in the underworld
Eurynomos
/// (Cherokee) – Human-cougar hybrid
Ewah
/// (Lithuanian) – Lake spirit
Eerinis
/// (Irish and Scottish) – Monster with half a body
Fachen
/// (Germanic mythology) – Dwarf who was cursed and turned into a dragon. He was later slain by Sigurd in the Saga of Nibelung.
Fafnir
/// (many cultures worldwide, esp. Germanic mythology/folklore) – Nature spirits
Fairy
/// (English) – Animal servant
Familiar
/// (Irish) – Little people that constantly play pranks
FarDarrig
/// (French) – Small,/// (some half-meter tall), wrinkled, and brown-skinned helpful sprites.
Farfadet
/// (Greek) – Three time-controlling sisters
Fates
/// (Roman) – Human-goat hybrid nature spirit
Faun
/// (Irish) – Hunger ghost
FearGorta
 /// Mesoamerican dragon
FeatheredSerpent
/// (Chinese) – Chinese wind god
FeiLian
/// (Chinese) – Chinese Phoenix, female in marriage symbol
Fenghuang
/// (Manx) – House spirit
Fenodyree
/// (Norse) – Gigantic, ravenous wolf
Fenrir
/// (Irish) – Double or doppelgänger
Fetch
/// (Slavic) – Undead
Fext
/// (Orkney) – Fish-human hybrid that kidnaps humans for servants
Finfolk
/// (Irish) – Ancestral race
FirBolg
/// (Many cultures worldwide) – Regenerative solar bird
FireBird
/// (Germanic) – Dragon
Firedrake
/// (Cantabrian) – Amphibious, scaled humanoid
FishMan
/// (American Folklore),/// (West Virginia) – Alien, humanoid
FlatwoodsMonster
/// (Irish) – Goat-headed giant
Fomorian
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Giant horned red cattle
ForestBull
// Norfolk black dog
Freybug
/// (Celtic) – Malevolent water spirit
Fuath
/// (Chinese) – Underworld dragon
Fucanglong
/// (Japanese) – Ghosts of people who drowned at sea
Funayurei
/// (Japanese) – Animated jar
FuruUtsubo
/// (Japanese) – Woman with a second mouth on the back of her head
FutakuchiOnna
/// (Scandinavian) – Animal familiar
Fylgja
/// (Seneca) – Dragon
Gaasyendietha
/// (Russian) – Iron-beaked bird with copper talons
Gagana
/// (Japanese) – Ghosts of especially greedy people
Gaki
/// (Mesopotamian) – Underworld demons
Gallu
/// (Basque) – Small demonic servants
Galtzagorriak
/// (Russian) – Prophetic human-headed bird
Gamayun
/// (Hindu) – Attendants of Shiva
Gana
/// (Irish) – Male fairy that seduces human women
Gancanagh
/// (Hindu) – Double-headed bird
Gandabherunda
/// (Hindu) – Male nature spirits, often depicted as part human, part animal
Gandharva
/// (French) – Water dragon
Gargouille
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – A flying humanoid who envelops his victims
Garkain
/// (Norse) – Giant, ravenous hound
Garmr
/// (Hindu) – Human-eagle hybrid
Garuda
/// (Japanese) – Giant malevolent skeletons
Gashadokuro
/// (Basque) – Wolf capable of walking upright
Gaueko
/// (Egyptian) – God of the Earth, married to Nut
Geb
/// (Heraldic) – The fish pike
Ged
/// (Greek) – Six-armed giant
Gegenees
/// (Roman) – Spirit that protects a specific place
GeniusLoci
/// (Slavic) – Male spirit associated with bringing rain and hail
German
/// (Greek) – Three-headed six-armed giant with three torsos and (in some sources) six legs
Geryon
/// (Scottish) – Tree guardian
GhillieDhu
/// Disembodied spirits of those that have died
Ghost
/// (Arabian) – Cannibalistic shapeshifting desert genie often classified as undead.
Ghoul
/// (Worldwide) – Immensely large and strong humanoids
Giant
/// (Worldwide) – Unusually large beasts
GiantAnimal
/// (Ojibwa) – Bison-snake-bird-cougar hybrid water spirit
GichiAnamiEBizhiw
/// (Sumerian) – Ghost
Gidim
/// (Greek) – Race of giants that fought the Olympian gods, sometimes depicted with snake-legs
Gigantes
/// (Scottish) – Smallest animal
Gigelorum
/// (Akkadian) – Human-scorpion hybrid
Girtablilu
/// (Scandinavian) – Corporeal ghost
Gjenganger
/// (Scottish) – Human-goat hybrid
Glaistig
/// (Manx) – Malevolent water horse
Glashtyn
/// (Alchemy) – Diminutive Earth elemental
Gnome
/// (Medieval) – Grotesque, mischievous little people
Goblin
/// (English) – Giant protector of London
Gog
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Dog-sized ant that digs for gold in sandy areas
GoldDiggingAnt
/// (Jewish) – Animated construct
Golem
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Hairy humanoid
Gorgades
/// (Greek) – Fanged, snake-haired humanoids that turn anyone who sees them into stone
Gorgon
/// (Japanese) – Vengeful ghosts, usually of martyrs
Goryo
/// (Ohio, USA) – Ape-like cryptid
Grassman
/// (Folklore) – Creatures that sabotage airplanes
Gremlin
/// (Heraldic) – Lion-eagle hybrid
Griffin
/// (Christian, Jewish, and Islamic mythology) – Fallen angels, father of Nephilim
Grigori
/// (English and Scandinavian) – Tutelary spirits of churches
Grim
/// (Worldwide) – Death angel often thought to be God's/Satan's assistant
GrimReaper
/// (English) – Malevolent water spirit
Grindylow
/// (Mapuche) – Malevolent spirit
Gualichu
/// (Christian, Jewish, and Islamic belief) – Subclassification of angels that guard and protect a specific person or living being
GuardianAngel
/// (Akkadian) – Human-bull hybrid
GudElim
/// (Japanese) – Anthropomorphic bird
Guhin
/// (Chinese) – Ghost that manifests as an old woman
GuiPo
/// (Chinese) – Ghostly tree that confuses travelers by moving
GuiShu
/// (Germanic) – Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid
Gulon
/// (Korean mythology) – Demonic fox with thousands of tails believed to possess an army of spirits and magic in its tails
Gumiho
/// (Australian Aboriginal) - An enormous reptile-fish whose movements carved out the landscape south of the Blue Mountains
Gurangatch
/// (Nepalese) – Child-eating demon
Gurumapa
/// (Welsh) – Black dog
Gwyllgi
/// (Welsh) – Malevolent spirit
Gwyllion
/// (American folklore) – Four-legged herbivore
Gyascutus
/// (Lincolnshire and Yorkshire) – Black dog
Gytrash
/// (Japanese) – Bull-headed monster
Gyuki
/// (Norse) – listed as the "best" hawk
Habrok
/// (Persian) – gigantic land animal
Hadhayosh
/// (Greek) – Ruler of the Underworld
Hades
/// (Korean) – dog-lion hybrid
Haetae
/// (Many cultures worldwide) – wise old woman who is usually a malevolent spirit or a disguised goddess
Hag
/// (Nuu-chah-nulth) – water serpent
Haietlik
/// (Khoikhoi) – male cannibalistic partially invisible monster
HaiUri
/// (Japanese) – talking beast which handed down knowledge on harmful spirits
Hakutaku
/// (Māori) – nature guardian
Hakuturi
/// (Norse) – human-elf hybrid
HalfElf
/// (Finnish) – spirit that protects a specific place
Haltija
/// (Greek) – oak tree nymph
Hamadryad
/// (Scandinavian) – personal protection spirit
Hamingja
/// (Buddhist, Hindu and Jainism) – mystic bird
Hamsa
/// (Rapa Nui) – long-eared humanoid
HanauEpe
/// (Malay) – shapeshifting water spirit
HantuAir
/// (Philippine) – demon
HantuDemon
/// (Malay) – demonic servant
HantuRaya
/// (Japanese) – humanoid female with barbed, prehensile hair
Harionago
/// (Greek) – birdlike human-headed death spirit
Harpy
/// (Norse) – undead being who cannot leave its burial mound
Haugbui
/// (Norse) – saltwater spirit
Havsrå
/// (Manipuri mythology) – celestial maidens, daughters of the Sky God Soraren
Helloi
/// (European) – humanoid spirit who haunts or kills
HeadlessHorseman
/// (Brazilian) – fire-spewing, headless, spectral mule
HeadlessMule
/// (Greek) – primordial giants with 100 hands and fifty heads
Hecatonchires
/// (Japanese) – crabs with human-faced shells, the spirits of warriors killed in the Battle of Dan-no-ura
Heikegani
/// (German) – household spirit
Heinzelmannchen
/// (Greek) – fen nymph
Helead
/// (Many cultures worldwide) – underworld dog
Hellhound
/// (Greek) – gatekeeper of Olympus
Heracles
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – glowing bird
Hercinia
/// (Basque) – dragon
Herensuge
/// (Greek) – nymph daughters of Atlas
Hesperides
/// (United States) – nocturnal forest creature
Hidebehind
/// (Japanese) – drought spirit
Hiderigami
/// (Ancient Egypt) – falcon-headed sphinx
Hieracosphinx
/// (Japanese) – baboon monster
Hihi
/// (Finnish) – nature guardian
Hiisi
/// (Greek)
Hippalectryon
/// (Etruscan, Greek and Phoenician) – horse-fish hybrid
Hippocamp
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – hybrid of a griffin and horse; a lion-eagle-horse hybrid
Hippogriff
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – horse-hoofed humanoid
Hippopodes
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – deer-goat hybrid
Hircocervus
/// (Japanese) – ghosts of the newly dead, which take the form of fireballs
Hitodama
/// (Japanese) – one-eyed childlike spirit
HitotsumeKozo
/// (English) – house spirit
Hob
/// (English) – malevolent spirit
Hobbididance
/// (Medieval) – friendly or amusing goblin
Hobgoblin
/// (Native American) – frog-mammoth-lizard hybrid
Hodag
/// (Kwakiutl) – bird
Hokhokw
/// (Japanese) – dog-like Chinese tree spirit
Hoko
/// (Persian) – eagle-lion hybrid, similar to a griffin
Homa
/// (Colombian) – human-alligator hybrid
HombreCaiman
/// (Latin America) – human-cat hybrid
HombreGato
/// (Alchemy) – small animated construct
Homunculus
/// (Japanese) – rooster-swallow-fowl-snake-goose-tortoise-stag-fish hybrid
Hoo
/// near passerine bird common to Africa and Eurasia that features in many mythologies in those continents
Hoopoe
/// snake which rolls by taking its tail in its mouth
HoopSnake
/// (Native American) – serpentine rain spirit
HornedSerpent
/// (Japanese) – deceased person
Hotoke
/// (Islamic) – heavenly beings
Houri
/// (Norse) – giant, who in eagle form, creates the wind by beating his wings
Hraesvelg
/// (Norse) – frost giants who are the main inhabitants of either Jotunheim or Niflheim
Hrímþursar
/// (Mayan) – human-deer hybrid
Huaychivo
/// (Norse) – pair of ravens associated with the Norse god Odin whose names mean Thought and Memory.
HuginnAndMuninn
/// (Icelandic/Faroese) – secret mound/rock dwelling elves
Huldufolk
/// (Scandinavian) – forest spirit
Hulder
/// (Chinese) – nine-tailed fox spirit
HuliJing
/// (Persian) – regenerative fire bird
Huma
/// (Akkadian) – lion-faced giant
Humbaba
/// (Chinese) – chaos spirit
Hundun
/// (Taíno) – nocturnal ghost
Hupia
/// (Japanese) – hundred-eyes creature
Hyakume
/// (Greek) – multi-headed water serpent/dragon
Hydra
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – snake whose poison causes the victim to swell up
Hydros
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – snake from the Nile River that would kill crocodiles from the inside
Hydrus
/// (Japanese) – hair-covered kappa
Hyosube
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – snake that kills its victims in their sleep
Hypnalis
/// (mythology) – Hoopoe
Hudhud
/// (Inuit) – Little people
Ishigaq
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Savage human-goat hybrid from a remote island chain
IslandSatyr
/// (Japanese) – Shark-like sea monster
Isonade
/// (Japanese) – Ghostly aerial phenomenon that attacks people
IttanMomen
/// (Japanese) – Char which appeared as a Buddhist monk
IwanaBozu
/// (American) – Rabbit with antlers
Jackalope
/// (English) – Malevolent giant
JackInIrons
/// (Medieval folklore) – Vegetal lantern
JackOLantern
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Winged serpent or small dragon
Jaculus
/// (Medieval folklore) – Island-sized fish
Jasconius
/// (Guaraní) – Nature guardian and bogeyman
JasyJaterei
/// (Hindu mythology) – Vulture demigod
Jatayu
/// (Slavic) – Vampirised premature baby
Jaud
/// (Java) – Vampiric little people
Jenglot
/// (Sawa) – Water spirit
Jengu
/// (Basque) – Megalith-building giant
Jentil
/// (Mi'kmaq) – Anthropophagous giant
Jenu
/// (Swedish) – Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid
Jerff
/// (American) – Demonic dragon or flying demon who was given birth to by an American living in New Jersey
JerseyDevil
/// (Chinese) – One-eyed, one-winged bird who requires a mate for survival
Jian
/// (Chinese) – Life-draining, reanimated corpse
Jiangshi
/// (Chinese) – Dragon
Jiaolong
/// (Japanese) – Spirit that protects a specific place
Jibakurei
/// (Lithuanian) – House spirit
Jievaras
/// (Japanese) – Corpse-eating ghost
Jikininki
/// (Arabian, Islamic) – Spiritual creatures; genii
Jinn
/// (Mi'kmaq) – Underwater horned snake; lives in lakes and eats humans
JipijkaM
/// (Chinese) – Nine-headed bird worshiped by ancient natives in Hubei Province.
Jiufeng
/// (Chinese) – Nine-headed, demonic bird
JiuTouNiao
/// (Iroquois) – Little people nature spirit
Jogah
/// (Norse) – Sea serpent
Jormungandr
/// (Japanese) – Spider woman
Jorogumo
/// (Japanese) – Animated folding screen cloth
Jotai
/// (Norse) – Gigantic nature spirits
Jotunn
/// (Korean) – Bird
Jujak
/// (Guyanese) – Malevolent spirit
Jumbee
/// (Dutch) – Little people that live underground, in mushrooms, or as house spirits
Kabouter
/// (Hopi and Puebloan) – Nature spirit
Kachina
/// (Japanese) – Little people and water spirits
Kahaku
/// (Scandinavian) – Wind spirit
Kajsa
/// (Hindu) – Descendants of Kala
Kalakeyas
/// (Greek) – Grotesque, malevolent spirit
Kallikantzaroi
/// (Japanese) – Wind spirit
Kamaitachi
/// (Philippine) – Philippine counterpart of Death
Kamatayan
/// (Japanese) – Nature spirit
Kami
/// (Japanese) – Hair-cutting spirit
Kamikiri
/// (Japanese) – Bathroom spirit
KanbariNyudo
/// (Manipuri mythology) – Great Dragon in the Kangla Palace
KanglaSha
/// (Japanese) – Drought spirit
Kanbo
/// (Japanese) – Money spirit
Kanedama
/// (Japanese) – Little people and water spirit
Kappa
/// (Philippine) – Malevolent tree spirit
Kapre
/// (Bulgarian and Turkish), also in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia known as Karanđoloz – Troublesome spirit
Karakoncolos
/// (Turkish) – Male night-demon
Karakura
/// (Japanese) – Tengu with a bird's bill
KarasuTengu
/// (Persian) – One-horned giant animal
Karkadann
/// (Greek) – Giant crab
Karkinos
/// (Japanese) – Eagle-human hybrid
Karura
/// (Polish) – Little people and mine spirits
Karzelek
/// (Japanese) – Animated parasol
KasaObake
/// (Japanese) – Cat-like demon which descends from the sky and carries away corpses
Kasha
/// (Japanese) – Kappa who climb into the mountains for the winter
Kashanbo
/// (Japanese) – Woman riding on a flaming wheel
KatawaGuruma
/// (Japanese) – Handsome man from the moon
KatsuraOtoko
/// (Albanian) – Man-eating giant
Katallan
/// (Lithuanian) – Nature spirit
Kaukas
/// (Japanese) – Supernatural river otter
KawaUso
/// (Japanese) – Smelly, cowardly water spirit
KawaZaru
/// (Chukchi mythology) – Ogre or evil spirit
KeLets
/// (Inuit) – Hairless dog
Keelut
/// (Abenaki) – Half-human half-animal cannibalistic giant
KeeWakw
/// (Japanese) – Amorphous afterbirth spirit
Kekkai
/// (Irish and Scottish) – Malevolent water horse
Kelpie
/// (Greek) – Female death spirit
Ker
/// (Japanese) – Mysterious, white, fluffy creature
KesaranPasaran
/// (Japanese) – Disease spirit
Keukegen
/// (Heraldic) – Wingless griffin
Keythong
/// (Nepalese) – Fat, hairy ape-like creature
Khyah
/// (Inuit) – Night-demon
Kigatilik
/// (Sotho) – Gluttonous monster that was one of the first beasts of creation
Kholomodumo
/// (Japanese) – Tree sprite from Okinawa
Kijimunaa
/// (Japanese) – She-devil
Kijo
/// (Slavic) – Female house spirit
Kikimora
/// (English and Scottish) – Ugly, mischievous mill spirit
Killmoulis
/// (Hindu) – Human-bird hybrid
Kinnara
/// (Japanese) – Bird
KinU
/// (Japanese) – Japanese Unicorn
Kirin
/// (Angola) – Malevolent, two-faced seducer
Kishi
/// (Japanese) – Fox spirit
Kitsune
/// (Japanese) – Person possessed by a fox spirit
KitsuneTsuki
/// (Japanese) – Woman who transformed into a serpentine demon out of the rage of unrequited love
Kiyohime
/// (German) – Ship spirit
Klabautermann
/// (folklore),/// (Cornish and Welsh) – Little people and mine spirits
Knocker
/// (English) – Water dragon
Knucker
/// (Greek) – Goblin like thieves and tricksters
Kobalos
/// (German) – Little people and mine or house spirits
Kobold
/// (Japanese) – Tree spirit
Kodama
/// (Germanic) – House spirit
Kofewalt
/// (Abenaki) – Hideous monster
KoGok
/// (Japanese) – Ubume bird
Kokakucho
/// (Japanese) – Protective animal
Komainu
/// (Japanese) – Infant that cries until it is picked up, then increases its weight and crushes its victim
KonakiJiji
/// (Japanese) – Bird-like creature
KonohaTengu
/// (Ainu) – Little people
KoroPokGuru
/// (Breton) – Little people and nature spirits
Korrigan
/// (Scandinavian) – Sea monster
Kraken
/// (Slavic) – Little people nature spirits
Krasnoludek
/// (Southeast Asian) – Vampiric, floating head
Krasue
/// (Germany) – Christmas Devil who punishes badly-behaved children
Krampus
/// (Guaraní) – Forest spirit
KuarahyJara
/// (Japanese) – Female corpse-chewing graveyard spirit
Kubikajiri
/// (Japanese) – Vengeful ghost of a woman mutilated by her husband
KuchisakeOnna
/// (Japanese) – Miniature fox spirit
KudaGitsune
/// (Japanese) – Human-faced calf which predicts a calamity before dying
Kudan
/// (Chinese) – One-legged monster
Kui
/// (Albanian) – Female demon who spreads sickness
Kukudhi
/// (Mi'kmaq) – Large, hairy, greedy, human-eating bipedal monsters whose scream can kill
Kukwes
/// (Albanian) – Drought-causing dragon
Kulshedra
/// (Philippine) – Death spirits
Kumakatok
/// (Korean) – Fox spirit
Kumiho
/// (Chinese) – Giant fish
Kun
/// (Hawaiian) – Shapeshifting tricksters
Kupua
/// (Japanese) – Guardian spirit of a warehouse
Kurabokko
/// (Japanese) – Jellyfish which floats through the air as a fireball
KurageNoHinotama
/// (Hindu mythology) – Second avatar of Vishnu in the form of a Turtle
Kurma
/// (Guaraní) – Wild man and fertility spirit
Kurupi
/// (Tlingit) – Shapeshifting "land otter man"
Kushtaka
/// (Korean) – Chicken-lizard hybrid
KyeRyong
/// (Japanese) – Animated scroll or paper
Kyourinrin
/// (Japanese) – Nine-tailed fox
KyubiNoKitsune
/// (Japanese) – Vampire
Kyuketsuki
/// (Assyrian) – Disease demon
LaBarTu
/// (Akkadian) – Sea snake
LabbMu
/// (Slavic) – Sunstroke spirit
Ladyidday
/// (Greek) – Dragon guarding the golden apples of the Hesperides
Ladon
/// (Greek) – Enchanted dog that always caught his prey
Laelaps
/// (Greek) – Anthropophagic giants
Laestrygonians
/// (Slavic) – Field spirit
Lakanica
/// (Worldwide) – Gigantic animals reported to inhabit various lakes around the world
LakeMonster
/// (Nepalese) – Demon with fangs
Lakhey
/// (Latin America) – Death spirit associated with drowning
LaLlorona
/// (Akkadian and Sumerian) – Protective spirit with the form of a winged bull or human-headed lion
Lamassu
/// (English) – Giant worm
LambtonWorm
/// (Greek) – Child-devouring monster
Lamia
/// (Basque) – Water spirit with duck-like feet
Lamiak
/// (Colombian) – Shapeshifting, female water spirit
LaMojana
/// (Greek) – Underworld nymph
Lampades
/// (Norse) – Nature spirits
Landvaettir
/// (Manipuri mythology) – Semi human, semi hornbill creature
Langmeidong
/// (Roman) – House spirit
Lares
/// (Venezuela) – Female ghost that punishes unfaithful husbands
LaSayona
/// (Colombian) – Nature spirit that seduces and kills men
LaTunda
/// Miniature bear thought to inhabit the lava beds of south central Oregon
LavaBear
/// (Lithuanian) – Field spirit
LaukuDvasios
/// (Baltic) – Sky spirit
Lauma
/// (Scottish) – Gigantic water rat
Lavellan
/// (Celtic) – Fairy lover
LeananSidhe
/// (Irish) – Possessing spirit or vampire
Leanashe
/// (Greek) – Meadow nymph
Leimakids
/// (Etruscan) – Fish-tailed lion
Leokampoi
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Tiny animal poisonous to lions
Leontophone
/// (Irish) – Cobbler spirit
Leprechaun
/// (Slavic) – Tree spirit
Leszi
/// (Greek) – White poplar tree nymph
Leuce
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Crocotta-lion hybrid
Leucrota
/// (Jewish) – Sea monster seen in Job 41
Leviathan
/// (Balinese) – Anthropophagous flying head with entrails
Leyak
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Human-horse hybrid
LibyanAegipanes
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Human-goat hybrid
LibyanSatyr
/// (Hungary) – Magical chicken that transforms into a humanoid
Liderc
/// (Southern Africa) – Magical bird found at sites of lightning strikes
LightningBird
/// (Slavic) – One-eyed hag or goblin
Likho
/// (Jewish) – Night-demoness
Lilin
/// (Assyrian) – Winged demon
Lilitu
/// (Greek) – Lake nymph
Limnades
/// (Germanic) – Dragon
Lindworm
/// (Norse) – Sunlight spirits; the Light Elves
Ljosalfar
/// (Albanian)- Demoness
Ljubi
/// (Welsh) – Frog-bat-lizard hybrid
LlamhigynYDwr
/// (Scottish) – Serpentine sea monster
LochNessMonster
/// (Norse mythology) – God of night
Loki
/// (Abenaki) – Hideous monster
LoLol
/// Chinese dragon
Long
/// (Italian) – Female human-goat hybrid and water spirit
Longana
/// (Chinese) – Dragon-horse hybrid
LongMa
/// (French America) – Shapeshifting, female vampire
Loogaroo
/// (French) – Snake-mollusk hybrid
LouCarcolh
/// (French) – Werewolf
LoupGarou
/// (American Folklore),/// (Ohio) – Cryptid, Humanoid Frog
LovelandFrog
/// (English) – House spirit
LubberFiend
/// (Chinese) – Truth-detecting animal
Luduan
/// (Albanian) – Vampire
Lugat
/// (Guaraní) – Werewolf | Cadaver-eating dog
Luison
/// Sea Monster
Lusca
/// (French) – Amusing goblin
Lutin
/// (Icelandic) Whale-like sea monster
Lyngbakr
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Feline guide spirit
Lynx
/// (Estonian mythology) – Subterranean spirit
MaaAlused
/// (Medieval bestiaries) – Hermaphroditic humanoid
Machlyes
/// (Medieval bestiaries) – Giant-headed humanoid
Macrocephali
/// (West African Mythology ) – Female ghost
MadamKoiKoi
/// (Colombian folklore) – Nature guardian
Madremonte
/// (Māori) – Savage, arboreal humanoids
Maero
/// (English folklore) – Giant protector of London
Magog
/// (Hindu mythology) – Giant elephant that holds up the world
MahaPudma
/// (Basque mythology) – Megalith-building giant
Mairu
/// (Latvian mythology) – Benevolent house spirit
MajasGari
// in Swahili mythology, shape-shifting spirits that can pass as humans
Majitu
/// (Indian mythology) – Aquatic beings
Makara
/// (Japanese mythology) – Pillow-moving spirit
MakuraGaeshi
/// (Welsh mythology) – Spirit of the hunt
MalltYNos
/// (Africa and the African diaspora) – Supernaturally beautiful water spirits
MamiWata
/// (Philippine mythology) – Vampires that sever their torsos from their legs to fly around
Manananggal
/// (Medieval bestiaries) – Humanoid with a forty-year lifespan
Mandi
/// (Medieval folklore) – Diminutive, animated construct
Mandrake
/// (Roman mythology) – Ancestral spirits
Manes
/// (Cree) – Little people with six fingers and no noses
Mannegishi
/// (Persian mythology) – Lion-human-scorpion hybrid
Manticore
/// (Brazilian mythology) – Giant sloth
Mapinguari
/// (Scandinavian folklore) – Female night-demon
Mara
/// (Italian folklore) – Malevolent water spirit
Marabbecca
/// (Tuamotu) – Attendant of Kiho-tumu, the supreme god
Mareikura
/// (Greek mythology) – Man-eating horses
MaresOfDiomedes
/// (Arabian mythology) – Jinn associated fortune tellers
Marid
/// (Norse mythology) – Mermen with prophetic abilities
Marmennill
/// (Lithuanian mythology) – Disease spirits
MaroDeives
/// (Abenaki mythology) – Shapeshifting toad spirit
MaskiMonGweZoOs
/// (French mythology) – Spirit that takes animal form; usually that of a black cat
Matagot
/// (Hindu mythology) – First Avatar of Vishnu in the form of a half-fish and half-man
Matsya
/// (Hindu mythology) – Peacock spirit
Mayura
/// (Jewish mythology) – Invisible, malevolent spirit
Mazzikin
/// (Guaraní mythology) – Snake-parrot hybrid
MboiTuI
/// (Central Africa) – Possessing demon
Mbwiri
/// (Greek mythology) – Serpent-female hybrid,/// (Gorgon) with numerous snake heads
Medusa
// biblical bird
MelekTaus
/// (Greek mythology) – Ash tree nymph
Meliae
/// (Medieval folklore) – Female water spirit, with the form of a winged mermaid or serpent
Melusine
/// (Hawaiian mythology) – Little people and craftsmen
Menehune
/// (Finnish mythology) – Little people and nature spirits
Menninkainen
/// (Singapore) – Combination of a lion and a fish, the symbol of Singapore
Merlion
/// (multiple cultures) – Human-fish hybrid
Mermaid
/// (multiple cultures) – Human-fish hybrid
Merman
/// (English mythology) – Elderly wizard
Merlin
/// (Irish mythology and Scottish) – Human-fish hybrid
Merrow
/// (Abenaki mythology) – Ice-hearted wizards
MeteeKolenOl
/// (Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Extremely elongated humanoid that has to live in rock crevasses to avoid blowing away
Mimi
/// (Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Death spirit
MinkaBird
/// (Philippine) – Giant swallow
Minokawa
/// (Greek mythology) – Human-bull hybrid
Minotaur
/// (Ojibwa) – Feline water spirit
Mishibizhiw
/// (Ojibwa) – Serpentine rain spirit
MisiGinebig
/// (Cree) – Serpentine rain spirit
MisiKinepikw
/// (Japanese mythology) – Water dragon
Mizuchi
/// (Chinese mythology) – Vengeful ghost or demon
Mogwai
/// (Latin American folklore) – Nature spirit
Mohan
/// (Congo) – Water-dwelling creature
MokeleMbembe
/// (Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Malevolent spirit that kills sorcerers
Mokoi
/// (Polynesian mythology) – Amphibious humanoid living in the spirit world,/// (underground world)
Mokorea
/// (Guaraní mythology) – Giant snake with antennae
Monai
/// (Medieval bestiaries) – One-horned stag-horse-elephant-boar hybrid, sometimes treated as distinct from the unicorn
Monocerus
/// (South America) – Giant monkey
MonoGrande
/// (Medieval bestiaries) – Dwarf with one giant foot
Monopod
/// (Manx folklore) – Nature spirit
MooinjerVeggey
/// (Slavic mythology) – Disembodied spirit
Mora
/// (Breton and Welsh mythology) – Water spirits
Morgens
/// (Japanese mythology) – Animated tea kettle
MorinjiNoOkama
/// (Greek) – Underworld spirit
Mormolykeia
/// (Romanian) – Vampiric ghost
Moroi
/// (Continental Germanic mythology) – Little people and tree spirits
MossPeople
/// (American folklore) – Large grey winged humanoid with glowing red eyes
Mothman
/// (Canadian folklore) – Fish-like lake monster
Mugwump
/// (Japanese mythology) – Shapeshifting badger spirit
Mujina
/// (Australian Aboriginal mythology) – Water monster
Muldjewangk
/// (Philippine mythology) – Spirit of a deceased person seeking justice or has unfinished business
Multo
/// (Egyptian) – Undead creature who revives
Mummy
/// (Romanian folklore) – Forest-dwelling hag
MumaPadurii
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – Giant goanna
MungoonGali
/// (Medieval bestiaries) – Hare-squirrel-boar hybrid that has an intense body heat
Muscaliet
/// (Greek mythology) – Spirits that inspire artists
Muse
/// (Mesopotamian mythology)
Mushusshu
/// (Heraldic) – Sheep-goat hybrid
Musimon
/// (Scandinavian folklore) – Ghosts of unbaptized children
Myling
/// (Medieval bestiaries) – Ant-lion hybrid
Myrmecoleon
/// (German) – Anthropophagous undead
Nachzehrer
/// (Buddhist and Hindu) – Nature and water spirits, serpentine or human-serpent hybrids
Naga
/// (Thai) – Spectral fire
NagaFireballs
/// (Mesoamerica) – Human-animal shapeshifter
Nagual
/// (Greek) – Freshwater nymph
Naiad
/// (Finnish) – Water spirit
Nakki
/// (Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon from the Oga Peninsula
Namahage
/// (Japanese) – Giant catfish whose thrashing causing earthquakes
Namazu
/// (Japanese) – Old woman who hides under the floor in abandoned storerooms
NandoBaba
/// (Thai) – Tree spirit
NangTakian
/// (Abenaki) – Earthquake spirit
NanomKeeaPoDa
/// (Greek) – Grotto nymph
Napaeae
/// (Hindu mythology) – Avatar of Vishnu in the form of half-man/half-lion
Narasimha
/// (Slavic) – Fate spirit
Narecnitsi
/// (Thai) – Pod people
Nariphon
/// (Gunai) – Water monster
Nargun
/// (Arabian) – Half-human, half-demon creature with half a body
Nasnas
/// (Slavic) – Ghost
Nav
/// (Hawaiian) – Savage humanoid
Nawao
/// (Abenaki) – Fish-human hybrid
NDamKenoWet
/// (Roman mythology) – God of freshwater and sea
Neptune
/// (Germanic mythology) – Female water spirit
Neck
/// (Catalan) – Little people that turn into coins
Negret
/// (Japanese) – Split-tailed magical cat
Nekomata
/// (Japanese) – Cat in the form of a girl
Nekomusume
/// (Greek) – Lion with impenetrable skin
NemeanLion
/// (Abrahamic mythology) – Gigantic sons of Grigori and human women
Nephilim
/// (Greek) – Nymph daughters of Nereus
Nereid
/// (Mapuche) – Nature spirit
Ngen
/// (Mapuche) – Fox-like water snake
Nguruvilu
/// (Chinese) – Predatory animal
Nian
/// (Hawaiian) – Warrior ghosts
Nightmarchers
/// (Japanese) – Monster which appears as a young woman and sucks all of the flesh off of its victim's body
Nikusui
/// (Shoshone) – Aggressive little people
Nimerigar
/// (Japanese) – Monkey-fish hybrid
Ningyo
/// (Western Africa) – Large reptile, possibly a dragon
NinkiNanka
/// (Scandinavian) – House spirit
Nisse
/// (Norse) – Dragon
Niohoggr
/// (Hindu) – Ocean demon
Nivatakavachas
/// (Germanic) – Female water spirit
Nix
/// (Japanese) – Supernatural wall, also a monstrous flying squirrel
Nobusuma
/// (Slavic) – Nightmare spirit
Nocnitsa
/// (Japanese) – Faceless ghost
NopperaBo
/// (Japanese) – Small sea serpent
Nozuchi
/// (Scottish) – Malevolent human-horse-fish hybrid
Nuckelavee
/// (Japanese) – Monkey-raccoon dog-tiger-snake hybrid
Nue
/// (Chinese) – Vengeful female ghost
NuGui
/// (Japanese) – Disembodied, flying head that attacks people
Nukekubi
/// (Māori) – Forest spirit
NukuMaiTore
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Humanoid with backwards, eight-toed feet
Nuli
/// (Roman) – Tutelary spirit
Numen
/// (Philippine) – Malevolent little people
Nuno
/// (Japanese) – Animated chunk of dead flesh
Nuppeppo
/// (Japanese) – Head-sized ball-like creature that floats in the sea and teases sailors
Nurarihyon
/// (Japanese) – Female monster who appears on the beach
NureOnna
/// (Japanese) – Spirit that manifests as an impassable, invisible wall
Nurikabe
/// (Tonga,/// (Zimbabwean) mythology) – Snake-spirit of the Zambezi River
NyamiNyami
/// (Lithuanian) – Cavern spirit
Nykstukas
/// (Greek) – Nature spirit
Nymph
/// (Japanese) – Shapeshifting spirits
Obake
/// (Japanese) – Spook which rides piggyback on a human victim and becomes unbearably heavy
Obariyon
/// (Ashanti) – Vampiric possession spirit
Obayifo
/// (West Africa) – Gigantic animal that serves witches
Obia
/// (Greek) – Nymph daughters of Oceanus
Oceanid
/// (Basque) – Storm spirit
Odei
/// (Norse mythology) – King of Asgard
Odin
/// (Slavic) – Changeling
Odmience
/// (Jewish) – Giant king of the Amorites
Og
/// (Canadian) Canadian Lake Monster
Ogopogo
/// (Nigeria) – Iron god for the Yoruba people,/// (South Western Nigeria)
Ogun
/// (Medieval folklore) – Large, grotesque humanoid
Ogre
/// (Japanese) – Ghost of a woman with a distorted face who was murdered by her husband
Oiwa
/// (Cantabrian) – Giant cyclops who embodies evil.
Ojancanu
/// (Japanese) – Spirit of a plate-counting servant girl, associated with the "Okiku-Mushi" worm
Okiku
/// (Japanese) – Death spirit
Okubi
/// (Japanese) – Dog or wolf that follows travelers at night, similar to the Black dog of English folklore
OkuriInu
/// (Guyanese) – Vampiric hag who takes the form of a fireball at night
OleHigue
/// (Japanese) – Giant, human-eating centipede that lives in the mountains
Omukade
/// (Japanese) – Large, grotesque humanoid demon, usually having red skin and horns
Oni
/// (Japanese) – Spectral fire
Onibi
/// (Japanese) – Bird-demon created from the spirits of freshly dead corpses
Onmoraki
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Human-donkey hybrid
Onocentaur
/// (Greek) – Shapeshifting demon
Onoskelis
/// (Japanese) – Vengeful ghost that manifests in a physical rather than a spectral form
Onryo
/// (Aztec and Latin American folklore) – Wild cat, possibly a subspecies of cougar
Onza
/// (Unknown origin) – Bird that flies backwards
OozlumBird
/// (Greek) – Bull-serpent hybrid
Ophiotaurus
/// (Heraldic) – Lion-eagle hybrid, similar to a griffin, but with leonine forelimbs
Opinicus
/// (Malay) – Forest spirit
OrangBunian
/// (Malay) – Spectral rapist
OrangMinyak
/// (Hungarian) – Shapeshifting demon
Ordog
/// (Greek) – Mountain nymph
Oread
/// (Tyrolean) – Little people and house spirits
Ork
/// (European) – Horse-headed, honest oracle classed as a demon
Orobas
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Peacock-eagle-swan-crane hybrid
OrphanBird
/// (Greek) – Two-headed dog
Orthrus
/// (Hellenized) – God of the dead and the judge of the underworld
Osiris
/// (Nigeria) – God of love and fertility
Oshun
/// (Finnish) – Bear spirit
Otso
/// (Worldwide) – Mystic serpent/dragon that eats its own tail
Ouroboros
/// (Slavic) – Malevolent threshing house spirit
Ovinnik
/// (Cornish) – Owl-like humanoid
Owlman
/// (Finnish) – Spectral fire
PaasselkaDevils
/// (Abenaki) – Weather spirit
Pamola
/// (Greek) – Human-goat hybrids descended from the god Pan
Panes
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – White-haired humanoid with giant ears and eight fingers and toes
Pandi
/// (Hindu) – Demons with herds of stolen cows
Panis
/// (Chinese) – Water dragon
Panlong
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Humanoid with gigantic ears
Panotti
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Feline with sweet breath
Panther
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Shapeshifting animal whose natural form was a large ruminant
Parandrus
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Fast, spotted feline believed to mate with lions to produce leopards
Pard
/// (Etruscan) – Fish-tailed leopard
Pardalokampoi
/// (Medieval folklore) – Giant race reputed to live in the area of Patagonia
Patagon
/// (Latin America) – Anthropophagous, one-legged humanoid
Patasola
/// (Māori) – White-skinned nature spirits
Patupairehe
/// (Scottish) – Strong little people
Pech
/// (Greek) – Spring nymph
Pegaeae
/// (Greek) – Winged horse
Pegasus
/// Pegasus-unicorn hybrid
Pegacorn
/// (Malay) – Servant spirit
Pelesit
/// (French) – Dragon
Peluda
/// (Malay) – Vampires that sever their heads from their bodies to fly around, usually with their intestines or other internal organs trailing behind
Penanggalan
/// (Chinese) – Giant bird
Peng
/// (Chinese) – Tree spirit
Penghou
/// (Persian) – Winged humanoid
Peri
/// (Allegedly Medieval folklore) – Deer-bird hybrid
Peryton
/// (Catalan) – Nightmare demon in the form of a cat or dog
Pesanta
/// (Chilota and Mapuche) – Vampiric, flying, shapeshifting serpent
Peuchen
/// (Thai) – Ghost of a person who has died suddenly of a violent or cruel death
PhiTaiHong
/// (Phoenician) – Regenerative bird reborn from its own ashes
Phoenix
/// (Native American mythology) – Winged, antlered feline-like dragon
Piasa
/// (Armenian) – Large land animal
Piatek
/// (Pictish stones) – Stylistic animal, possibly a dragon
PictishBeast
/// (Mapuche) – Nature spirit
Pillan
/// ([Japanese spirit])
Plagg
/// (Abenaki) – Water spirit
PimSkwaWagenOwad
/// (Finnish) – Minor demon
Piru
/// (Hindu) – Carrion-eating demon
Pishacha
/// (Peru) – Monster man that steals its victim's body fat for cannibalistic purposes
Pishtaco
/// (Abenaki) – Serpentine rain spirit
PitaSkog
/// (Cornish) – Little people and nature spirits
Pixie
/// (Chinese) – Winged lion
Pixiu
/// (Chinese) – Horned, dragon-lion hybrid
PiYao
/// (Slavic) – Vampire created when a mother strangles her child
Plakavac
/// (Abenaki) – Tree spirit
PokWejeeMen
/// (Polish) – Little people and field spirits
Polevik
/// (Colombian) – Man-eating chicken spirit
PolloMaligno
/// (Malay) – Invisible servant spirit
Polong
/// (German) – Ghost that moves objects
Poltergeist
/// (Guaraní) – Wild man and nature spirit
Pombero
/// (Māori) – Grotesque, malevolent humanoid
Ponaturi
/// (Malay) – Undead, vampiric women who died in childbirth
Pontianak
/// (American Folklore) Kentucky Urban Legend – Cryptid, a murderous creature that is part man, sheep, and goat
PopeLickMonster
/// (Māori) – Giant bird
Poukai
/// (Buddhist, Hindu, and Jain) – Ghosts of especially greedy people
Preta
/// (Romanian – Roman) – Undead wolf
Pricolici
/// (Serbia) – Dog-headed monster
Psoglav
/// (Slavic) – Mischievous spirit
Psotnik
/// (Greek) – Butterfly-winged nymphs, daughters of Psyche
Psychai
/// (Greek) – Creatures, spirits, angels, or deities in many religions who escort newly deceased souls from Earth to the afterlife
Psychopomp
/// (Welsh) – Shapeshifting animal spirit
Puca
/// (Icelandic) – Malevolent little person
Puki
/// (English) – House spirit
Puck
/// (German) – House spirit
Putz
/// (Philippine) – Headless humanoid
Pugot
/// (Frisian) – House spirit
Puk
/// (Latvian) – Dragon
Pukis
/// (Native American mythology) – Troll-like gray-skinned being
Puckwudgie
/// (Greek) – Little people
Pygmy
/// (Greek) – Insect-dragon hybrid
Pyrausta
/// (Greek) – Serpentine dragon
Python
/// (Inuit mythology) – Aquatic human abductor
Qalupalik
/// (Chinese) – Dragon-ox-deer hybrid
Qilin
/// (Inuit) – Large, bald dog spirit
Qiqirn
/// (Jewish) – Evil spirits
Qliphoth
/// (Arthurian legend) – Serpent-leopard-lion-hart hybrid
QuestingBeast
/// (Aztec) – Important Aztec god whose name means "feathered serpent"; he is not to be confused with the quetzal, a type of bird
Quetzalcoatl
/// (Frankish) – Five-horned bull
Quinotaur
/// (Norse) – Spirit that protects a specific place
Ra
/// (Akkadian) – Vampiric spirit that ambushes people
Rabisu
/// (Swedish) – Tree spirit
Radande
/// (Lithuanian) – Malevolent witch
Ragana
/// (Japanese) – Lightning spirit
Raiju
/// (Native American) – Rain spirit
RainBird
/// (Lenape) – Crow spirit
RainbowCrow
/// (Hindu) – Whale-sized, multi-colored fish
RainbowFish
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – Snake
RainbowSerpent
/// (Buddhist and Hindu) – Shapeshifting demon
Rakshasa
/// (Cantabrian) – Extremely long, weasel-like animal
Ramidreju
/// (Slavic) – Whirlwind spirit
Rarog
/// (Cherokee) – Life-draining spirit
RavenMocker
/// (Native American, Norse, and Siberian) – Trickster spirit
RavenSpirit
/// (Norse) – Squirrel spirit
Ratatoskr
/// (American Folklore) – Possible plesiosaur or serpent
RaystownRay
/// (English) – Evil, ugly humanoid
Redcap
/// (Jewish) – Gigantic land animal
ReEm
/// (Heraldic) – Eagle, sometimes depicted with two heads
Reichsadler
/// (Jewish) – Giant
Rephaite
/// (Global) – Human-lizard hybrid
ReptilianHumanoid
/// (Medieval folklore) – Reanimated dead
Revenant
/// (Arabian and Persian) – Gigantic bird
Roc
/// (Japanese) – Long-necked, humanoid trickster
Rokurokubi
/// (Africa and India) – Skeletal creature with elements of a rabbit, badger, and bear
Rompo
/// (Vietnamese) dragon
Rong
/// (French America) – Human-wolf shapeshifter
Rougarou
/// (Slavic) – Female water spirit
Rusalka
/// Japanese dragon
Ryu
/// (Brazilian) – One-legged nature spirit
Saci
/// (Japanese) – Horse head that dangles from trees on Kyūshū
Sagari
/// (Japanese) – Haunted pillar, installed upside-down
Sakabashira
/// (Alchemy) – Fire elemental
Salamander
/// (Japanese) – Shark-man servant of the dragon king of the sea
Samebito
/// (Slavic) – Nature spirit
Samodiva
/// (Hindu) – The demigod Jatayu's brother
Sampati
/// (Northern Europe) – Nursery spirit that induces sleep in children
Sandman
/// (South Western Nigeria) – Yoruba king of arts, music, dance and entertainment
Sango
/// (Philippine) – Spirits in the form of fireballs that roam around the forest
Santelmo
/// (North Pole-European folklore) – Elderly man who delivers gifts to well-behaved children on the night of Christmas Eve
SantaClaus
/// (Romanian) – Nature spirit
Sanziana
/// (Philippine) – Bird of good fortune
Sarimanok
/// (Hindu) – Bird spirit
Sarngika
/// (Japanese) – Wicked monkey spirit who was defeated by a dog
Sarugami
/// (Japanese) – Mind-reading humanoid
Satori
/// (Heaven--Abrahamic mythology) – Ruler of Hell
Satan
/// (Greek) – Human-goat hybrid and fertility spirit
Satyr
/// (Medieval Bestiary) – Apes who always bear twins, one the mother loves, the other it hates
Satyrus
/// (Japanese) – Shapeshifting turban snail spirit
SazaeOni
/// (English) – Shapeshifting undead
Sceadugenga
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Snake which mesmerizes its prey
Scitalis
/// (Sumerian) – Human-scorpion hybrid
ScorpionMan
/// (Greek) – Human-snake hybrid with a snake's tail, twelve legs, and six long-necked snake heads
Scylla
/// (Heraldic) – Fish-tailed bee
SeaBee
/// (Heraldic) a legendary creature that has the head and upper body of a lion, but with webbed forelimbs and a fish tail.
SeaLion
/// (Medieval folklore) – Fish-like humanoid
SeaMonk
/// (Worldwide) – Giant, marine animals
SeaMonster
/// (Worldwide) – Serpentine sea monster
SeaSerpent
/// (Heraldic) – Fish-tailed wyvern
SeaWyvern
/// (Japanese) – Water spirit which can be heard making merry at night
Seko
/// (Faroese, Icelandic, Irish, and Scottish) – Human-seal shapeshifter
Selkie
/// (Japanese) – Human-faced frog which guides newly deceased souls to the graveyard
SenpokuKanpoku
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Snake with corrosive venom
Seps
/// (Worldwide) – Snake spirit
Serpent
/// (Ancient Egypt) – Serpent-leopard hybrid
Serpopard
/// (Japanese) – Tiger-carp hybrid
Shachihoko
/// (Worldwide) – Spiritual imprint
Shade
/// (American) – Malevolent ghost
ShadowPeople
/// (Persian) – Giant eagle or hawk
Shahbaz
/// (Islam) – Islamic version of the Devil (Satan) from the Bible
Shaitan
/// (Chinese) – Rain bird
ShangYang
/// (Jewish) – Chicken-legged demon
Shedim
/// (Akkadian and Sumerian) – Protective spirit who takes the form of a winged bull or human-headed lion
Shedu
/// (English, Scottish and German, as schellenrocc) – Water spirit
Shellycoat
/// (Chinese) – Shapeshifing sea monster
Shen
/// (Chinese) – Weather dragon
Shenlong
/// (Japanese) – Water spirit from Shikoku
Shibaten
/// (Japanese) – Servant spirit
Shikigami
/// (Japanese) – Child-sized servant spirit
ShikiOji
/// (Japanese) – Underworld hag
Shikome
/// (Japanese) – "Death god"
Shinigami
/// (Japanese) – White, faceless spirit
ShiroBozu
/// (Japanese) – Animated mosquito netting or dust cloth
Shirouneri
/// (Japanese) – Spirit of a dead person
Shiryo
/// (Japanese) – Lion-dog hybrid
Shisa
/// (Chinese) – Protective animal
Shishi
/// (Japanese) – Red-haired sea-sprites who love alcohol
Shojo
/// (Japanese) – Creature that peers in through skylights
Shokera
/// (Albanian) – Vampire witch that feeds on children
Shtriga
/// (Chinese) – Drowned ghost
ShuiGui
/// (English) – Dog/monkey
ShugMonkey
/// (Japanese) – Red-faced ghoul
Shunoban
/// (Japanese) – Ruler of the Oni
ShutenDoji
/// (Irish and Scottish) – Ancestral or nature spirit
Sídhe
/// (Philippine) – Goat-like vampire
Sigbin
/// (Greek) – Bald, fat, thick-lipped, and flat-nosed followers of Dionysus
Sileni
/// (Slavic) – Winged dog
Simargl
/// (Persian) – Dog-lion-peacock hybrid
Simurgh
/// (Batak) – Feline animal
Singa
/// (Choctaw) – Serpentine rain spirit
SintHolo
/// (Greek) – Human-bird hybrid
Siren
/// (Slavic) – Demonic human-headed bird
Sirin
/// (Akkadian) – Dragon with aquiline hind legs and feline forelegs
Sirrush
/// (American Indian) – Two-headed sea serpent
Sisiutl
/// (Paiute) – Red-haired giants
SiTeCah
/// (Norse) – Freshwater spirit
Sjora
/// (Norse) – Sea spirit
Sjovaettir
/// (American Indian) – Animal-human shapeshifter
SkinWalker
/// (Scandinavian) – Forest spirit
Skogsra
/// (Norse) – Wolf that chases the Sun
Skoll
/// (Chinook Jargon) – Hairy giant
Skookum
/// (Medieval folklore) – Living skeletons
Skeleton
/// (Slavic) – Flying imp
Skrzak
/// (Polish) – Weather spirit
SkyWomen
/// (Norse) – Eight-legged horse
Sleipnir
/// (Irish and Scottish) – Restless ghost
Sluagh
/// (Japanese) – Invisible spirit which pulls on sleeves
SodehikiKozo
/// (Japanese) – Fiery ghost of an oil-stealing monk
Sogenbi
/// (Japanese) – Ritual disciplinary demon
Soragami
/// (Japanese) – Sound of trees being cut down, when later none seem to have been cut
SorakiGaeshi
/// (Japanese) – Ghost with an abacus
Sorobanbozu
/// (Japanese) – Fox spirit from Kyoto
Sotangitsune
/// (Trinidad and Tobago) – Vampiric hag who takes the form of a fireball at night
Soucouyant
/// (Cherokee) – Sharp-fingered hag
Spearfinger
/// (Worldwide) – Terrifying ghost
Spectre
/// (Greek) – Winged woman-headed lion
Sphinx
/// (Romanian) – Little people
Spiridus
/// Ghosts
Spirit
/// (Cornish) – Guardians of graveyards and ruins
Spriggan
/// (Medieval folklore) – little people, ghosts or elves
Sprite
/// (American) – Ugly and lonely creature capable of evading capture by dissolving itself into a pool of tears
Squonk
/// (Albanian) – Demonic dragon who guards a treasure
Stihi
/// (Romanian) – Vampire
Strigoi
/// (Roman) – Vampiric bird
Strix
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Humanoid whose males have enormous feet, and females have tiny feet
Struthopodes
/// (Slavic) – Vampiric undead
Strzyga
/// (Slavic) – Malevolent mountain spirit
Stuhac
/// (Greek) – Metallic bird
StymphalianBird
/// (New Guinea) – Cannibalistic sorcerer
Suangi
/// (Medieval folklore) – Female night-demon
Succubus
/// (Slavic) – Fortune spirit
Sudice
/// (Japanese) – Sand-throwing hag
SunakakeBaba
/// (Japanese) – Small dog- or cat-like creature that rubs against a person's legs at night
Sunekosuri
/// (Finnish) – Hellhound
Surma
/// (Japanese) – Japanese version of the Chinese Vermillion Bird
Suzaku
/// (Norse) – Unnatural strong horse, father of Sleipnir
Svaoilfari
/// (Norse) – Cavern spirits; the Black Elves
Svartalfar
/// (Ancient Egyptian) – Crocodile-leopard-hippopotamus hybrid
Swallower
/// (Worldwide) – Swan-human shapeshifter
SwanMaiden
/// (Alchemy) – Air elemental
Sylph
/// (Medieval folklore) – Forest spirit
Sylvan
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – African giant
Syrbotae
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Reptilian humanoid
Syrictae
/// (Jewish) – Large land animal
Tachash
/// (American Folklore),/// (Appalachia) – Powerful animal, that takes revenge on those who steal its tail
Tailypo
/// (Japanese) – Tengu surrounded in demonic fire
Taimatsumaru
/// (Persian) – Nature spirit
Takam
/// (Japanese) – Female spirit which can stretch itself to peer into the second story of a building
TakaOnna
/// (Greek) – Giant made of bronze
Talos
/// (Scottish) – Shapeshifting water spirit
Tangie
/// (Māori) – Water spirit
Taniwha
/// (Japanese) – Unharvested persimmon which becomes a monster
Tantankororin
/// (Japanese) – Shapeshifting raccoon dog
Tanuki
/// (Mariana Islands) – Ancestral spirits
TaotaoMona
/// (Chinese) – Greed spirit
Taotie
/// (Mangaia) – Nature spirit
Tapairu
/// (French) – Dragon with leonine, turtle, bear, and human attributes
Tarasque
/// (Basque) – One-eyed giant
Tartalo
/// (Christian) – Demonic punisher
Tartaruchi
/// (Japanese) – Poltergeist that hits the tatami mats at night
TatamiTataki
/// (Alpine Folklore) lizard-like creature, often described as having the face of a cat, with a serpent-like body which may be slender or stubby, with four short legs or two forelegs
Tatzelwurm
/// Japanese dragon
Tatsu
/// (Etruscan) – Fish-tailed bull
Taurokampoi
/// (Trabzon) – Night-demon[citation needed]
Tavara
/// (Guaraní) – Lizard with seven dog heads
TejuJagua
/// (Mayan) – Bird
Tecumbalam
/// (Japanese) – Anthropomorphic bird
Tengu
/// (Japanese) – Angelic humanoid
Tennin
/// (Japanese) – Ghost of a blind man, with his eyes on his hands
TeNoMe
/// (Azerbaijani) – Azerbaijani mythical creature similar to the cyclops Polyphemus
Tepegoz
/// (Jewish) – Lion-eagle-scorpion hybrid made from the blood of murder victims
TerribleMonster
/// (Greek) – Gigantic fox
TeumessianFox
/// (Medieval folklore) – Animal-headed humanoid
Theriocephalus
/// (Asia and Africa) – Solar bird
ThreeLeggedBird
/// (Native American) – Avian lightning bird spirit
Thunderbird
/// (Norse mythology) – God of thunder and storm
Thor
/// (Chinese) – Meteoric dog
Tiangou
/// (Chinese) – Celestial dragon
Tianlong
/// (Canarian) – Evil Dog
Tibicena
/// (English) – Bog spirit
TiddyMun
/// (Philippine) – Asian fairy bluebird
Tigmamanukan
/// (Jewish) – Giant lion
Tigris
/// (Philippine) – Anthropomorphic horse
Tikbalang
/// (Zulu) – Little people and water spirit
Tikoloshe
/// (Hindu) – Sea monster
Timingila
/// (Māori) – Spirit that protects a specific place
Tipua
/// (Greek) – Primeval god
Titan
/// (Philippine) – Demons that are souls of dead unbaptized babies
Tiyanak
/// (Inuit) – Sea serpent
Tizheruk
/// (Tlaxcalan) – Shapeshifting vampire
Tlahuelpuchi
/// (Japanese) – Spirit child carrying a block of tofu
TofuKozo
/// (Japanese) – Ghost who lurks in grade school restroom stalls
ToireNoHanakosan
/// (Scandinavian) – House spirit
Tomte
/// (Slavic) – Water spirit
Topielec
/// (Japanese) – Greed spirit
Totetsu
/// (Malay) – Servant spirit
Toyol
/// (Spanish and Portuguese) – Grotesque, mischievous little people
Trasgo
/// (Chilota) – Fertility spirit
Trauco
/// (Cantabrian) – Diminutive demon
Trenti
/// Character in a story which exhibits a great degree of intellect or secret knowledge, and uses it to play tricks or otherwise disobey normal rules and conventional behaviour
Trickster
/// (Hindu) – Demonic inhabitants of Tripura
Tripurasura
/// (Greek) – Male human-fish hybrid
Tritons
/// (Norse) – Nature spirit
Troll
/// (Orkney and Shetland) – Little people and nature spirits
Trow
/// (Abenaki) – Vampiric demon
TsiNoo
/// (Japanese) – Shapeshifting, giant spider
Tsuchigumo
/// (Japanese) – Plump snake-like creature
Tsuchinoko
/// (Japanese) – Inanimate object that becomes animated after existing for 100 years
Tsukumogami
/// (Cherokee) – Giant nature spirit
TsulKalu
/// (Japanese) – Icicle woman
TsuraraOnna
/// (Japanese) – Monster which drops or lowers a bucket from the top of a tree to catch people
TsurubeOtoshi
/// (Slavic) – Evil shapeshifter
TugarinZmeyevich
/// (Welsh) – Nature spirit
TylwythTeg
/// (Inuit) – Animated construct
Tupilaq
/// (Māori) – Pale spirit
Turehu
/// (Swiss) – legendary figure who turns people into dogs
Turst
/// (Hungarian) – Giant falcon that helped shape the origins of the Magyars
Turul
/// (Heraldry) – Like a real tiger, but lacks stripes. It has the tufted tail of a lion and a thick mane along the neck like a horse
Tyger
/// (Greek) – Winged, snake-legged giant
Typhon
/// (Aztec) – Skeletal star spirit
Tzitzimitl
/// (Japanese) – Ghosts of women who died in childbirth
Ubume
///(Manipuri mythology) – Semi human, semi hornbill creature
UchekLangmeidong
/// (Japanese) – Horse's leg which dangles from a tree and kicks passersby
UmaNoAshi
/// (Japanese) – Ghost of drowned priest
Umibozu
/// (Japanese) – Female sea monster who steals fish
UmiNyobo
/// (Worldwide) – Dead that behave as if alive
Undead
/// (Native American) – Feline water spirit
UnderwaterPanther
/// (Alchemy) – Water elemental
Undine
/// (Lakota) – Dragon
Unhcegila
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Horse-like creature with the legs of an antelope, the tail of a lion and a single magical healing horn.
Unicorn
/// (Lakota) – Serpentine rain spirit
Unktehi
/// (Lakota) – Reptilian water monster
Unktehila
/// (Lithuanian) – River spirit
Upinis
/// (Native American) – Hairy giant
Urayuli
/// (Romanian) – Giant
Urias
/// (Mesopotamian) – Lion-human hybrid guardian spirit
Urmahlullu
/// (Japanese) – Bull-headed monster
UshiOni
/// (Akkadian) – ″Underworld messenger spirit″
Utukku
/// (Japanese) – Spirit that shouts to surprise people
Uwan
/// (Latvian) – Spirit that misleads people
Vadatajs
/// (Hindu) – Divine mounts
Vahana
/// (Indian) – Deadly snake
Vaibhavi
/// (Norse) – Female spirit that leads souls of dead warriors to Valhalla
Valkyrie
/// (Romanian) – Female nature spirit
Valva
/// (Danish) – Supernatural raven
Valravn
/// (Slavic) – Reanimated corpse that feeds on blood
Vampire
/// (Hindu) – Human-ape hybrid
Vanara
/// (Romanian) – Female weather spirit
Vantoase
/// (Hindu mythology) – Third Avatar of Vishnu in the form of a boar
Varaha
/// (Romanian) – Vampire or werewolf
Varcolac
/// (Scandinavian) – Ghostly double
Vardoger
/// (Norse) – Hawk sitting between the eyes of an eagle in the crown of the World Tree Yggdrasil
Vedrfolnir
/// (Latvian) – Ghost, shade, formed after a death of a human
Veli
/// Chuvash dragon
VeriSelen
/// (Hindu) – Corpses possessed by vampiric spirits
Vetala
/// (Catalan) – Dragon with breasts and an eagle's beak
Víbria
/// (German) – Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid
Vielfras
/// (Slavic) – Weather spirit
Vila
/// (Latvian) – Animalistic, werewolf-like monster
Vilkacis
/// (Colombian) – Handsome demon
Virunas
/// (Mayan) – Mystical dragon
VisionSerpent
/// (Norse) – Rooster that sits atop the tree
Vídopnir
/// (Slavic) – Male water spirit
Vodyanoy
/// (Greek) – Undead wolf-human hybrid
Vrykolakas
/// (Norse) – Nature spirit
Vaettir
/// (German) – Forest spirit
Waldgeist
/// (Abenaki) – Water spirits
WanaGamesAk
/// (Japanese) – Crocodilian water monster
Wani
/// (Japanese) – Demon in the form of a burning human-headed ox cart
Wanyudo
/// (Indonesian Muslim) – Egg-laying bird
WarakNgendog
/// (English and Scandinavian O.N. vargr) – Giant, demonic wolf
Warg
/// (Worldwide) – Male witch
Warlock
/// (Abenaki) – Aurora spirits
WassanMonGaneehlaAk
/// (Chinese) – Water spirit
WaterMonkey
/// (Alchemy) – Water elemental
WaterSprite
/// (Australia Aboriginal) – Goanna spirits
WatiKutjara
/// (Abenaki) – Shapeshifting snail spirit
WaWonDeeAMegw
/// (German) – Female spirit
WeisseFrauen
/// (Mapuche) – Demon
Wekufe
/// (Algonquian) – Anthropophagous spirit
Wendigo
/// (Inuit) – Water spirit
Wentshukumishiteu
/// (Worldwide) – Feline-human shapeshifter
Werecat
/// (Africa) – Hyena-human shapeshifter
Werehyena
/// (Worldwide) – Wolf-human shapeshifter
Werewolf
/// (Worldwide) – Ghost of a murdered or mistreated woman
WhiteLady
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – Giant frog-headed goanna with six legs
Whowie
/// (European) – Hairy, bipedal, man-like creature
WildMan
/// (Worldwide) – Spectral fire
WillOTheWisp
/// (Scottish) – Malevolent spirit
WirryCow
/// (Worldwide) – Person who practices magic
Witch
/// (Dutch) – Female, ancestral spirit
WitteWieven
/// (German) – Forest animal comprised from various animal parts,/// (similar to a Chimera)
Wolpertinger
/// (Australia Aboriginal) – Weather spirit
Wondjina
/// (Scottish) – Water spirit or ghostly apparition
Wraith
/// (Scottish) – Wolf-headed humanoid spirit
Wulver
/// (Chinese) – Beheaded ghost
WuTouGui
/// English dragon
Wyrm
/// (Germanic Heraldic) – Flying reptile, usually with two legs and two wings
Wyvern
/// (Asturian) – Female water spirit
Xana
/// (Greek)
Xanthus
/// (Mayan) – Bird
Xecotcovach
/// (Aztec) – Giant
Xelhua
/// (mythology), (Chinese) – Ape or four-winged bird
Xiao
/// (Chinese) – Headless giant
XingTian
/// (Aztec) – Drought spirit
Xiuhcoatl
/// (Albanian) – Elves
Xhindi
/// (South America) – Sea monster
Yacumama
/// (Indigenous people of the Amazon) – Mythical water people, with backwards heads and feet
Yacuruna
/// (Japanese) – Malevolent, nocturnal spirit
Yadokai
/// (Japanese) – Demon who rides through the night on a headless horse
YagyoSan
/// (Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainism) – Male nature spirit
Yaksha
/// (Keralite) – Vampire
Yakshi
/// (Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainism) – Female nature spirit
Yakshini
/// (Japanese) – Disease and misfortune spirit
YakubyoGami
/// (Medieval Bestiaries) – Antelope- or goat-like animal with swiveling horns
Yale
/// (Tamil) – Lion-like beast
Yazhi
/// (English) – Nature spirit
YalleryBrown
/// (Yama,/// (East Asia)) – Wrathful god
Yama
/// (Japanese) – Echo spirit
YamaBiko
/// (Japanese) – Savage, mountain-dwelling humanoid
YamaBito
/// (Japanese) – Monkey-like mountain spirit
YamaChichi
/// (Japanese) – Dog-like mountain spirit
YamaInu
/// (Japanese) – Mountain giant
YamaOtoko
/// (Japanese) – Gigantic, eight-headed serpent
YamataNoOrochi
/// (Japanese) – Malevolent, mountain-dwelling hag
YamaUba
/// (Japanese) – Hairy, one-eyed spirit
YamaWaro
/// (Japanese) – Spirit which causes strange noises
Yanari
/// (Chinese) – Animalistic demon or fallen gods
Yaoguai
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – Diminutive, sucker-fingered vampire
YaraMaYhaWho
/// (Japanese) – Three-legged crow of Amaterasu
Yatagarasu
/// (Japanese) – Serpent spirits
YatoNoKami
/// (English) – Headless dog
YethHound
/// (Himalayan) – Mountain bigfoot
Yeti
/// (Turkic) – Either a dragon or a giant
Yilbegan
/// (Japanese) – Mountain dwelling spirit
Yobuko
/// (Japanese) – Supernatural monster
Yokai
/// (Japanese) – Underworld hag
YomotsuShikome
/// Korean dragon
Yong
/// (Japanese) – Fairy
Yosei
/// (Japanese) – Mysterious bird that sings at night, sometimes indicating that the okuri-inu is near
Yosuzume
/// (Chinese) – Wandering ghost
YouHunYeGui
/// (Australian Aboriginal) – Nocturnal human-ape hybrid, also Yahoo
Yowie
/// (Heraldic) – Boar-camel-ox-serpent hybrid
Ypotryll
/// (Chinese) – Distressed ghost
YuanGui
/// (Japanese) – Childlike snow spirit
Yukinko
/// (Japanese) – Female snow spirit
YukiOnna
/// (Japanese) – Ghost
Yurei
/// (Tatar) – 100-year-old snake that transforms into a beautiful human
Yuxa
/// (Persian) – Dragon
Zahhak
/// (Baltic) – Serpentine fertility spirit
Zaltys
/// (Jewish) – Giant
Zamzummim
/// (Albanian) – Mountain fairy who bless warriors
ZanaEMalit
/// (Romanian) – Nature spirit
Zână
/// (Japanese) – House spirit
ZashikiWarashi
/// (Romanian) – Wolf-headed dragon
Zburator
/// (Slavic mythology) – Disembodied, heroic spirit
Zduhac
/// (Greek) – God of lightning and storms
Zeus
/// (Japanese) – Rain-making dragon
ZennyoRyuo
/// (Slavic) – Glowing bird
ZharPtitsa
/// (Chinese) – Pig-headed dragon
Zhulong
/// (Chinese) – Fire elemental bird
ZhuQue
/// (Lithuanian) – Forest spirit in the form of a glowing skeleton
Ziburinis
/// (Tatar) – Flying chicken-legged reptile
Zilant
/// (West Africa) – Water spirits
Zin
/// (Jewish) – Giant bird
Ziz
/// (Slovenia) – White golden-horned deer
Zlatorog
/// (Romanian folklore) – Giant with a habit of kidnapping young girls
Zmeu
/// Slavic dragon
Zmiy
/// (Vodou/Worldwide) – Re-animated corpse
Zombie
/// (Japanese) – Animated clock
Zorigami
/// (Japanese) – Tutelary spirit
Zuijin
/// (Japanese) – Faceless ghost
ZunberaBo
