A half-human, half-Kitsune hybrid is often called a Hanyō-kitsune (half-demon fox) or simply Hanyō (half-demon/yōkai) in Japanese folklore and fiction, but various creative works use unique terms like Kitsunekin or Half-Kitsune, often retaining fox ears, tails, and some magical abilities, notes this Fandom wiki and Reddit users.
Male or female, a half yokai half human is often called a Hanyō 半妖. Specifically a half kitsune half human could be called a hanyō-kitsune 半妖狐
Limited-Shapeshifting: Kitsunes have a limited ability to shapeshift. They can assume a complete human form, a half-kitsune half-human form, a complete fox form and their original kitsune form. This ability allows them to blend among humans and hide them from being detected by humans and supernatural beings.
The Japanese red fox.
In fact, in many a story female kitsune marry unwitting human men and become loving wives and devoted mothers, and children born of these pairings are reputed to have powerful divination abilities themselves.
Although there are about 13 different types of kitsune, based on the elements, we can classify the beast as either good or evil. The good kitsune is called zenko and the evil one is nogitsune.
Appearance: Kokuko are rare kitsune who show themselves only during the reign of a peaceful leader. They have thick, black fur and are slightly larger than other kitsune. They have from one to nine tails depending on their age. Kokuko live in northern climates like Siberia and Hokkaidō.
The red fox, called Kitsune in Japanese, can be found throughout Japan. Both physically and spiritually, the fox is seen everywhere from the Shinto shrines of Kyoto to the snow covered wilds of eastern Hokkaido.
The kitsune (狐, きつね; IPA: [kʲi̥t͡sɨne̞]), in popular Japanese folklore, is a fox or fox spirit which possesses the supernatural ability to shapeshift or bewitch other life forms.
The marriage was not legal, and the ceremony has no legal standing under Japanese law, as current laws do not recognise marriages between humans and artificial intelligence.
They gain power and a tail every 50-100 years, with a nine-tailed fox (Kyūbi no Kitsune) being at least 1,000 years old.
9-tailed fox "Kyuubi no kitsune" (九尾 の 狐) and changes its color to white or gold. "Kyuubi no kitsune", the thousand-year-old fox, has divine status and can see and hear all things happening in the world. It can also emit fire, known as "kitsune-bi", from its mouth or tail.
The ushi-oni (牛鬼; ox oni; ox demon), or gyūki, is a yōkai from the folklore of western Japan. The folklore describes more than one kind of ushi-oni, but the depiction of a bovine-headed monster occurs in most. Ushi-oni generally appear on beaches and attack people who walk there.
MONSTER OF THE DAY: CAMBION A cambion is generally described as any humanoid creature that was half-fiend. The exact meaning of the term "cambion" has differed over the years. Some sources state a "true" cambion" is the union of a planetouched woman (usually a tiefling) and a tanar'ri.
You'd be hard pressed to find a male kitsune in the older tales, but kitsune can be both male and female, and in fact can take the form of either a man or a woman when changing to a human. Today, however, there are many stories of male kitsune, particularly in anime and manga.
It is said that around the age of 50 kitsune begin their training to learn powers. 野狐 Nogitsune/Yako: evil foxes that bring diseases and disasters to humans. They are on the lowest rankings of kitsune, the best rank they can get is that of chiko.
The more widely-used term Kumiho follows the McCune–Reischauer romanization system, whereas the official romanization of Korean is Gumiho, which is also closer to the actual Korean pronunciation.
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There exist various types of Kitsune, related to the 13 elements of Japanese mythology (celestial, wind, spirit, darkness, fire, earth, river, ocean, forest, mountain, thunder, sound, and time). It is believed that each fox is connected to a particular element and that this element will determine its temperament.
Kitsune, the Legend
Kitsune have a range of magical powers that can be wielded for good or for evil: mind-control, human possession and even affecting the weather. Kitsune are the only yokai in Japanese folklore who fall in love and get married, which typically results in a Fox's Wedding, or Kitsune no Yomeiri,.
Appearance: Yōko literally means “strange fox.” It refers to the magical powers attributed to foxes in folklore. Normally foxes are referred to simply as kitsune; although terms like yōko and bake gitsune can be helpful to distinguish between the animals and the folklore.
The Kitsune has ~1% chance to apply the Foxfire Chakra mutation when using its ability. The Kitsune has a very similar ability to the Raccoon, except it gives mutations.
Kitsune reproduce sexually and are viviparous. Their gestation period is eight months, and they are typically born in litters of two to three. A pregnant kitsune can change form without affecting her children.
A kitsune is a fox capable of taking human form (usually female), and survive by draining life-force. Unlike vampires, they do this without drinking their blood. They, too, are incapable of entering human dwelling places without invitation.