• Blue
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    31 year ago

    Isn’t Mørkø for Finland just Hufsa from Moomin?

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Yes, the name Mörkö directly translates to boogeyman, but I wouldn’t really count it as one.

  • @paddirn
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    31 year ago

    Probably most, if not all, have something comparable, even if it’s not explicitly named the same. Saalua in Iraq, I have no idea what that is and never heard of it before, but that looks pretty close to a succubus or just a garden variety demon. Same with many of the others, if somebody hasn’t already written something up for that specific entity, you can be sure a comparable one already exists.

  • Dr. Bob
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    1 year ago

    Wtf is a “Seven o’clock man”? I’ve lived in Canada most of my life (5 provinces and counting), and in Uni lived with a couple people doing folklore degrees. The fact that I’ve never heard of our national Boogie man tells me they’re reaching.

    Googled it. French-Canadian story dating from 19th century maybe.  ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. And the article was American.

    • @paddirn
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      21 year ago

      Sounds like a really lazy way for parents to make sure their kids are back home before it gets too late, from the generations that didn’t have to care where their kids were at all hours of the day. Just make up some dumb shit like, “Be back before dark or the Seven O’Clock Man will get you!” and other than that they don’t give a shit what the kid does the rest of the day.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Am French-Canadian raised, i remember the Seven o’clock man. It was used as a bedtime rule, something about being in bed before 7 or the man gets you. Never heard it in english tho, it was always “Bonhomme sept heures”.

      • Dr. Bob
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        11 year ago

        That would make sense. It has a modern feel to it too - clocks weren’t a common household item until the last 150 years or so.

  • @Something_Complex
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    21 year ago

    I know at least 3 things that aren’t even close.

    Like you put international ones in just a contry and you give random countries the boogie man of their neighbours.

    In most places it’s just called boggie man but in whatever language they are speaking.

    For them all to be called boggie man that means they had to share similar traits…

    • @AcamonOP
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      21 year ago

      Yeah, I have no idea who made the map (the “Toy Zone” I suppose?) so I wouldn’t imagine it’s very accurate. I guess many of them seem to be “boogiemen” in the sense of creatures that parents warn their children will eat them, kidnap them, etc. But even the ones I recognise don’t all match that…

      But as a random collection of weird monster ideas, I thought it was pretty cool.