Degunja the wind demon from Ultraman: Towards the Future.

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Degunja the wind demon from Ultraman: Towards the Future.
Jin, my favorite wind user
Now I’ve made him a girlie, Enjoy!!!
Monkey King Reloaded (2017) 小悟空
Director: Ye Weiqing / Wang Yili Screenwriter: Aaron Mendelsohn Genre: Comedy / Animation / Adventure Country/Region of Production: Mainland China/Hong Kong, China Language: Mandarin Chinese Date: 2018-07-14 (Mainland China) Duration: 85 minutes Also known as: Wukong 3D / King Kong Adventure in New York / New York Pilgrim / 小金刚纽约大冒险 / 小悟空 3D / 纽约行者 Type: Reimanging
Summary:
Omori was originally a golden monkey in the zoo. He dreamed that one day he could become the Monkey King, the Great Sage Equal to Heaven. Omori had a deep friendship with the administrator Guan Guan. One day, a mysterious monster kidnapped Guan Guan and took him to New York. The reason behind this was actually closely related to the master Sun Wukong's conquest of demons thousands of years ago. Omori rushed to New York to rescue Guan Guan and discovered that the evil force controlling Guan Guan was Sun Wukong's defeated general, the Bull Demon King. How to defeat the extremely powerful Bull Demon King became a problem for Omori, Master Bajie, and police officer Amo. A very difficult test is waiting for Omori. Will Omori succeed?
Source: https://en.hkcinema.ru/film/30732
Link: https://m.imehua.com/mv/18887/online/556686_1.html
kagura, inuyasha ♡
Witchtober 2021 “element”
Thiiiiis is three days late but stuff happened~ I haven’t drawn Belphe in ages, either.
Prompt #70: Jin accidentally blows Botan off her oar mid-flight, but recovers her like a gentleman (demon).
Let me know if you get inspired by one of the prompts! I would love to read your writing.
Truly a bird of paradise Finally done! ;w;/ I have started and outlines this piece in 2016, so a few things a a bit off, but I am just glad I finally mustered up the time to finish this. I really like the group DAMMED and its people, and I’m trying to get more active, so bear with me. ; w ; Anyways, have some Ranginui! Medium: Mijello/Daniel Smith Watercolors, white Poscamarker
Pazuzu. In Assyrian and Babylonian mythology, PAZUZU (sometimes Fazuzu or Pazuza) was the king of the demons of the wind, brother of Humbaba and son of the god Hanbi. He also represented the southwestern wind, the bearer of storms and drought. Concerning Pazuzu’s name itself, Dutch assyriologist Franciscus A. M. Wiggermann offers two possible solutions. The first, Neo-Assyrian PN Pa-zu-zu, occurs once in a text from Tall Halaf, and is explained as deriving either from Aramaic pezôzā, “made of fine gold,” or from Aramaic PZZ, “to be impetuous, agile.” The latter of this class of derivations fits Pazuzu’s character exceptionally well. Whether the Neo-Assyrian names Ba-su-su and Ba-zu-zu reflect the same meaning for the same entity cannot be known. The second potential solution is a bit more tenuous. Pasusu would be derived from PSS, an unattested secondary variant of PSH, known in Babylonian from the word pessû — “halt” or “dwarf.” This would place Pasusu in the class of apotropaic dwarfs attested both in Mesopotamian and Egyptian religion and iconography. In fact, on one well-made Lamaštu amulet, Pazuzu has remarkably short legs, and in an inscription calls Himself ú-GU-u, or “cripple.” Wiggermann tells us that Pazuzu’s name is not attested before the Iron Age (1200 – 550 BCE), though “the bilingual [Sumero-Akkadian] incantations can be taken to point to an earlier date, as well as perhaps His appearance in an alamdimmû omen.” As for specific, reasonable dates and alternative sources, the German assyriologist Nils P. Heeßel tells us that “the earliest securely datable Pazuzu representations stem from the royal tombs in Kalhu (Nimrud), which can be dated to the end of the 8th century BCE, while the earliest reference to Pazuzu in texts is found in a letter dated to around 670 BCE.” (2011) Pazuzu is known from over 170 iconographic representations stemming from the Tigris-Euphrates river system and beyond during the 1st millennium BCE, from the Late Babylonian and Neo-Assyrian (circa 1000 – 609 BCE) and Neo-Babylonian (circa 626 – 539 BCE) periods.