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guro
scat
furry -rating:g

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  • ? genzoman 669

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  • ? japanese mythology 163

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Information

  • ID: 882156
  • Uploader: UnChocolate »
  • Date: over 14 years ago
  • Size: 204 KB .jpg (717x1000) »
  • Source: pixiv.net/artworks/17591644 »
  • Rating: Sensitive
  • Score: 6
  • Favorites: 24
  • Status: Active

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japanese mythology drawn by genzoman

Artist's commentary

  • Original
  • Bakemono

    Let´s Wikiattack!

    Obake (お化け) and bakemono (化け物) (sometimes obakemono) are a class of yokai, preternatural creatures in Japanese folklore. Literally, the terms mean a thing that changes, referring to a state of transformation or shapeshifting.

    These words are often translated as ghost, but primarily they refer to living things or supernatural beings who have taken on a temporary transformation, and these bakemono are distinct from the spirits of the dead. However, as a secondary usage, the term obake can be a synonym for yūrei, the ghost of a deceased human being.

    A bakemono's true form may be an animal such as a fox (kitsune), a raccoon dog (tanuki), a badger (mujina), a transforming cat (bakeneko), the spirit of a plant — such as a kodama, or an inanimate object which may possess a soul in Shinto and other animistic traditions. Obake derived from household objects are often called tsukumogami.

    A bakemono usually either disguises itself as a human or appears in a strange or terrifying form such as a hitotsume-kozō, an ōnyūdō, or a noppera-bō. In common usage, any bizarre apparition can be referred to as a bakemono or an obake whether or not it is believed to have some other form, making the terms roughly synonymous with yokai.

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