Tsukumogami
0 sources
Tsukumogami
Summary
Tsukumogami is a mythical animal[1]. Tsukumogami draws 818 Wikipedia views per month (mythical_animal category, ranking #3 of 22).[2]
Key Facts
- Tsukumogami's image is recorded as Hyakki-Yagyo-Emaki Tsukumogami 1.jpg[3].
- Tsukumogami's instance of is recorded as mythical animal[4].
- Tsukumogami's subclass of is recorded as yōkai[5].
- Tsukumogami's Commons category is recorded as Tsukumogami[6].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Ungaikyō[7].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Chōchinobake[8].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Koto-furunushi[9].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as kasa-obake[10].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Ittan-momen[11].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Boroboroton[12].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Biwa-bokuboku[13].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Bakezōri[14].
- Tsukumogami's has part is recorded as Abumi-guchi[15].
- Tsukumogami's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/05wcjf[16].
- Tsukumogami's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Tsukumogami[17].
- Tsukumogami's name in kana is recorded as つくもがみ[18].
- Tsukumogami's Miraheze article ID is recorded as shinto:Tsukumogami[19].
- Tsukumogami's Pixiv Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 付喪神[20].
Body
Designation and Status
Tsukumogami's instance of is recorded as mythical animal[4].
Why It Matters
Tsukumogami draws 818 Wikipedia views per month (mythical_animal category, ranking #3 of 22).[2] Tsukumogami has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] Tsukumogami is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]