Mythology/Fairy Tales with C

  • Famous fairy-tale girl and princess from the classic story.

  • One-eyed giant from Greek mythology; Polyphemus is one.

  • Half man, half horse creature from Greek myths.

  • Three‑headed hound guarding the Greek underworld.

  • Roman god of love, counterpart of Greek Eros.

  • Fire‑breathing hybrid monster from Greek legend.

  • Wise centaur tutor of heroes like Achilles.

  • Enchantress from Greek myth who turned men into animals.

  • Often used for personified Time; mythic cosmic figure.

  • Dr. Seuss character; magical cat in famous children’s tale.

  • Legendary goat‑sucking monster from Latin American folklore.

  • Ferryman of the dead on the river Styx in Greek myth.

  • Villainous pirate captain from Peter Pan fairy tale.

  • Legendary castle/realm of King Arthur in Arthurian legend.

  • Titan leader, father of Olympian gods in Greek mythology.

  • Vampire count from Bram Stoker’s novel and many legends.

  • Roman goddess of agriculture, Greek equivalent Demeter.

  • Queen in Greek myth, bragged of beauty, mother of Andromeda.

  • Cosmic entity from Lovecraft’s mythos, Great Old One.

  • Muse of epic poetry in Greek mythology.

  • Grinning cat from Wonderland in Carroll’s fairy tale.

  • Primordial void/deity in Greek myth; origin of cosmos.

  • Spanish name for Cinderella, same fairy-tale heroine.

  • Tragic prophetess in Greek myth, cursed to be ignored.

  • Conan the Barbarian, sword-and-sorcery hero by R.E. Howard.

  • Type of angelic being in Abrahamic myth and art.

  • Friendly child ghost from 1940s cartoons and comics.

  • Urban-legend killer spirit from horror films.

  • Greek minor god of opportunity, son of Zeus.

  • Greek hero, dragon slayer, founded Thebes.

  • Pixar’s Land of the Dead from Mexican folklore.

  • Cartoon ghost from 1940s, now pop‑culture folklore

  • Board‑game fantasy realm; works as a fairy‑tale style world

  • Fire‑breathing giant from Roman myth, slain by Hercules

Słowa na liście Mythology/Fairy Tales with C pochodzą od graczy gry słownej Państwa Miasta.