. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "24180766"^^ . . . . . . . . . "\n* Jackalope (American) \u2013 Rabbit with antlers \n* Jack-In-Irons (English) \u2013 Malevolent giant \n* Jack-o'-lantern (Medieval folklore) \u2013 Vegetal lantern \n* Jaculus (Medieval Bestiaries) \u2013 Winged serpent or small dragon \n* Jasconius (Medieval folklore) \u2013 Island-sized fish \n* Jasy Jaterei (Guaran\u00ED) \u2013 Nature guardian and bogeyman \n* Jatayu (Hindu mythology) \u2013 Vulture demigod \n* Jaud (Slavic) \u2013 Vampirised premature baby \n* Jenglot (Java) \u2013 Vampiric little people \n* Jengu (Sawa) \u2013 Water spirit \n* Jentil (Basque) \u2013 Megalith-building giant \n* Jenu (Mi'kmaq) \u2013 Anthropophagous giant \n* Jerff (Swedish) \u2013 Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid \n* Jersey Devil (American) \u2013 Demonic dragon or flying demon who was given birth to by an American living in New Jersey \n* Jian (Chinese) \u2013 One-eyed, one-winged bird who requires a mate for survival \n* Jiangshi (Chinese) \u2013 Life-draining, reanimated corpse \n* Jiaolong (Chinese) \u2013 Dragon \n* Jibakurei (Japanese) \u2013 Spirit that protects a specific place \n* Jievaras (Lithuanian) \u2013 House spirit \n* Jikininki (Japanese) \u2013 Corpse-eating ghost \n* Jinn (Arabian, Islamic) \u2013 Spiritual creatures; genii \n* \u2013 Underwater horned snake; lives in lakes and eats humans \n* Jiufeng (Chinese) \u2013 Nine-headed bird worshiped by ancient natives in Hubei Province. \n* Jiu tou niao (Chinese) \u2013 Nine-headed, demonic bird \n* Jogah (Iroquois) \u2013 Little people nature spirit \n* J\u00F6rmungandr (Norse) \u2013 Sea serpent \n* Jor\u014Dgumo (Japanese) \u2013 Spider woman \n* Jotai (Japanese) \u2013 Animated folding screen cloth \n* J\u00F6tunn (Norse) \u2013 Gigantic nature spirits \n* Jujak (Korean) \u2013 Bird \n* Jumbee (Guyanese) \u2013 Malevolent spirit"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1081287287"^^ . "List of legendary creatures (J)"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "2822"^^ . . . "\n* Jackalope (American) \u2013 Rabbit with antlers \n* Jack-In-Irons (English) \u2013 Malevolent giant \n* Jack-o'-lantern (Medieval folklore) \u2013 Vegetal lantern \n* Jaculus (Medieval Bestiaries) \u2013 Winged serpent or small dragon \n* Jasconius (Medieval folklore) \u2013 Island-sized fish \n* Jasy Jaterei (Guaran\u00ED) \u2013 Nature guardian and bogeyman \n* Jatayu (Hindu mythology) \u2013 Vulture demigod \n* Jaud (Slavic) \u2013 Vampirised premature baby \n* Jenglot (Java) \u2013 Vampiric little people \n* Jengu (Sawa) \u2013 Water spirit \n* Jentil (Basque) \u2013 Megalith-building giant \n* Jenu (Mi'kmaq) \u2013 Anthropophagous giant \n* Jerff (Swedish) \u2013 Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid \n* Jersey Devil (American) \u2013 Demonic dragon or flying demon who was given birth to by an American living in New Jersey \n* Jian (Chinese) \u2013 One-eyed, one-winged bird who req"@en . .