-
water horse known locally as cabbyl-
ushtey. Yet
another source claims the
glashtin was a water-bull (tarroo-
ushtey in Manx), half-bovine and half-equine...
- each-uisce (anglicized as
aughisky or ech-ushkya) in
Ireland and cabbyl-
ushtey on the Isle of Man. It
usually takes the form of a horse, and is similar...
- the
British Islands they
include the
Welsh ceffyl dŵr and the Manx cabbyl-
ushtey.
Parallels to the
general Germanic neck and the
Scandinavian bäckahäst have...
- Gaelic, is a
mythological Scottish creature similar to the Manx
tarroo ushtey and the
Irish tarbh-uisce.
Generally regarded as a
nocturnal resident of...
- the
nuggle also
known as the
shoopiltee or
njogel (Shetland) the cabbyl-
ushtey (Isle of Man) the
Ceffyl Dŵr (Wales) the
capaill uisce or the
glashtin (Ireland)...
- Man of
Ballacurry 1911 Manx
Sophia Morrison Manx
Fairy Tales The Tarroo-
Ushtey 1963 Manx Dora
Broome Fairy Tales from the Isle of Man Teeval, Princess...
- the tarroo-
ushtey or Water-Bull, an "amphibious creature"
resembling a bull that
tries unsuccessfully to
procreate with cows the cabbyl-
ushtey or water...
- and
concealed in a
chest until he matured. In Manx folklore, if a Tarroo-
ushtey water bull
mates with a cow, it only
calves a lump of
flesh and skin without...
- th
broad /t̪/ trome, cooinaghtyn,
thalloo slender /tʲ/ or /tʃ/ poosit,
ushtey,
tuittym broad,
between vowels /d̪/ /ð/
brattag baatey slender, between...
-
liking for lazy people. However, it
should not be
confused with the Cabbyl-
ushtey, the Manx
water horse.
Bugganes were
occasionally called upon by the fairies...