μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Chains involving the eating of an object. (Members of the chain not interrelated.)

Miscellaneous groups of motifs. · Formulas. · Cumulative tales. · Chains involving a single scene or event without interdependence among the individual actors. · view the constellation · filed as Z33

Cited in the index
  • general Taylor JAFL XLVI 83 Nos. 2025–2028, Hdwb. d. Märchens II 178b.
Within the index

Filed under Chains involving a single scene or event without interdependence among the individual actors.

4 finer motifs beneath it
The fleeing pancake. A woman makes a pancake, which flees. Various animals try in vain to stop it. Finally the fox eats it up The fat cat. While the mistress is away, the cat eats the porridge, the bowl, and the ladle. When the mistress returns she says, "How fat you are!" The cat: "I ate the porridge, the bowl, and the ladle, and I will eat you." The cat meets other animals and eats them after the same conversation. Finally eats too many Woman meets a pig. "Good morning." "Why are you up so early?" "I am not up so early. I have drunk seven vats of milk and eaten seven plates of porridge and I shall eat you." She ate the pig The fat troll (wolf). A troll eats the watcher's five horses and finally the watcher himself. The master goes to investigate. The troll: "I ate the five horses, I ate the watcher, and I will eat you." Does so. Likewise the wife, servant, daughter, son, and dog. The cat scratches the troll open and rescues all
Filed beside it
Chains involving a wedding Chains involving a death: animal actors Chains involving other events without interrelation of members

ask the rhapsode about this motif · search the shelf for “interrelated” · wander