¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Kobolds
1. kobold [n] - See also: kobold
Lexicographical Neighbors of Kobolds
Literary usage of Kobolds
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Fairy Mythology: Illustrative of the Romance and Superstition of Various by Thomas Keightley (1905)
"... kobolds.« Von Kobolt sang die Amme mir Von Kobolt sing1 Ich wieder. Voie HALE«.
Of Kobold sang my nurse to mo ; Of Kobold I too sing. ..."
2. Heroes and Heroines of Fiction, Classical Mediæval, Legendary: Classical by William Shepard Walsh (1915)
"When we accuse our servants of betraying the respectable laws of the cordon bleu
we are often wrong; it may all be the fault of the kobolds. ..."
3. Demonology and Devil-lore by Moncure Daniel Conway (1879)
"Shadows—Night Deities—kobolds—Walpurgisnacht—Night as Abettor of
Evil-doers—Nightmare—Dreams—Invisible Foes—Jacob and his Phantom—Nott—The Prince of ..."
4. In Troubadour-land: A Ramble in Provence and Languedoc by Sabine Baring-Gould (1891)
"... Craus—Canal of Craponne—Climate of the Crau—The Bise and Mistral—Force of the
wind— Cypresses—A vision of kobolds. leaving Marseilles by train for Arles ..."
5. Northern Mythology: Comprising the Principal Popular Traditions and by Benjamin Thorpe (1852)
"I told you yesterday that the old woman rode on a grey horse ; but that 's not
true ; she rode only on her grey cat." kobolds, OR GOBLINS. ..."
6. Ghost Land; Or, Researches Into the Mysteries of Occultism: Illustrated in a by William Britten, Emma Hardinge Britten (1897)
"INVOCATIONS—ELEMENTARIES—PLANETARIES—MIRRORS AND CRYSTALS kobolds—FARIES SPIRITUALISM
AS FOUND IN SCOTCH HIGHLANDS. No page of retrospect in my fateful ..."