μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Hornbill borrows tomtit's bill. (Cf. A2343.1.4.)

Mythological motifs. · Animal characteristics. · Various causes of animal characteristics. · Animal characteristics: obtaining another's qualities. · view the constellation · filed as A2241.9

Filed across the traditions
  • Ila (Rhodesia) Smith and Dale 374 No. 24.
Within the index

Filed under Animal characteristics: borrowing and not returning. Animal borrows a member (or quality) from another and refuses to return it. (Cf. A2242, A2313.3, A2345.1, A2351.3, A2375.2.1, A2421.4, A2435.4.1.)

Filed beside it
Stag's horns borrowed from dog. (Cf. A2326.1.1.) Owl's wings borrowed from rat (or other animal) Partridge's voice borrowed from tortoise Cuckoo borrows food from other birds. (Cf. A2435.4.1.) Nightingale borrows blindworm's eye. Each has one eye. Nightingale borrow's blindworm's and will not return it.(Cf. A2332.6.1.) Jay borrows cuckoo's skin. (Cf. A2313.1.) Squirrel borrows coney's tail. When coney's tail is not returned, he goes in shame to live among rocks. (Cf. A2378.1.5, A2433.3.5.) Boy borrows python's hands and feet: hence python lacks them. (Cf. A2371.3.1.) Beaver borrows muskrat's tail and never gives it back Monkey borrows tail from deer and refuses to return it
Travels with (Thompson’s cf.)
Where hornbill got his big beak. (Cf. A2241.9.)

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