Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Kobold

Ko′bold

,
Noun.
[G., perh. orig., house god, hose protector. See
Cobalt
]
A kind of domestic spirit in German mythology, corresponding to the Scottish brownie and the English
Robin Goodfellow
.

Definition 2024


Kobold

Kobold

See also: kobold

German

Noun

Kobold m (genitive Kobolds, plural Kobolde)

  1. kobold, goblin

Related terms

kobold

kobold

See also: Kobold

English

Alternative forms

  • cobold

Noun

kobold (plural kobolds)

  1. (German mythology) An ambivalent, sometimes vindictive, spirit that is capable of materialising as an object or human, often a child; a sprite.
    • 1904, Andrew Lang (collector), author and translator not identified, The Mermaid and the Boy, The Brown Fairy Book, page 176,
      At this point a cock crew, and the youth jumped up hastily saying : 'Of course I shall ride with the king to the war, and if I do not return, take your violin every evening to the seashore and play on it, so that the very sea-kobolds who live at the bottom of the ocean may hear it and come to you.'
    • 2009, Robert Grant Haliburton, The Dwarfs of Mount Atlas: Collected Papers on the Curious Anthropology of Robert Grant Haliburton, page 75,
      Movers, in the first chapter of his Phönizier, says that that group of deities called Dactyls, Cabiri, Corybantes, and Cyclopes, were similar to those old Germanic divinities now known as Kobolds.
  2. (German folklore) A mischievous elf or goblin, or one connected (and helpful) to a family or household.
    • a. 1867, George MacDonald, The Shadows, 2000 [1980], The Golden Key and Other Stories, page 96,
      The king had seen all kinds of gnomes, goblins, and kobolds at his coronation; [] .
    • 1977, James Buchanan Given, Society and Homicide in Thirteenth-Century England, 2007, page 138,
      Among the nonhuman creatures that peopled rural Europe in the Middle Ages — the fairies, elves, dwarfs, trolls, and kobolds — there were beneficent female spirits who patronized those households that treated them well.
    • 2011, William Wirt Sikes, Varla Ventura, The Occult Powers of Goats and Other Welsh Tales of Goblins, Fairies, Gnomes, and Elves, unnumbered page,
      In Germany also the kobolds are rather troublesome than otherwise, to the miners, taking pleasure in frustrating their objects, and rendering their toil unfruitful.
  3. (fantasy literature) One of a diminutive and usually malevolent race of beings.
    • 2005, Scott Elliot Hicks, The Shattering Light of Stars, page 62,
      There were also various trolls like great smiling badgers, brownies darting about laughing, dwarves with large gray heads, sensuous mermaids, stony kobolds, green gnomes, sirens and many elves, who were busy purifying the sacred hilltop in a mythological cooperation marvelous to the soul's perception.

Synonyms

  • (hostile supernatural creature): See goblin

Translations

See also


Dutch

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: ko‧bold

Etymology

From German Kobold. Doublette with kabouter.

Noun

kobold m (plural kobolden, diminutive koboldje n, feminine koboldin)

  1. kobold

Related terms


Hungarian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈkobold]
  • Hyphenation: ko‧bold

Noun

kobold (plural koboldok)

  1. kobold

Declension

Inflection (stem in -o-, back harmony)
singular plural
nominative kobold koboldok
accusative koboldot koboldokat
dative koboldnak koboldoknak
instrumental kobolddal koboldokkal
causal-final koboldért koboldokért
translative kobolddá koboldokká
terminative koboldig koboldokig
essive-formal koboldként koboldokként
essive-modal
inessive koboldban koboldokban
superessive koboldon koboldokon
adessive koboldnál koboldoknál
illative koboldba koboldokba
sublative koboldra koboldokra
allative koboldhoz koboldokhoz
elative koboldból koboldokból
delative koboldról koboldokról
ablative koboldtól koboldoktól
Possessive forms of kobold
possessor single possession multiple possessions
1st person sing. koboldom koboldjaim
2nd person sing. koboldod koboldjaid
3rd person sing. koboldja koboldjai
1st person plural koboldunk koboldjaink
2nd person plural koboldotok koboldjaitok
3rd person plural koboldjuk koboldjaik