
Also known as Ashinagatenaga, Tenaga-Ashinaga
are a pair of yōkai in Japanese folklore. One, , has extremely long legs, while the other, , has extremely long arms. They were first described in the Japanese encyclopedia Wakan Sansai Zue. They are said to be found in Kyūshū. thumb|right|Ashinaga and tenaga fishing, ukiyo-e by [[Utagawa Kuniyoshi]]
are a pair of yōkai in Japanese folklore. One, , has extremely long legs, while the other, , has extremely long arms. They were first described in the Japanese encyclopedia Wakan Sansai Zue. They are said to be found in Kyūshū. thumb|right|Ashinaga and tenaga fishing, ukiyo-e by [[Utagawa Kuniyoshi]]
==Description== The pair is commonly described as people from two countries, the "Long-legged Country", and the "Long-armed Country". As the names suggest, the inhabitants of these two countries possess unusually lengthy arms and legs. The two work together as a team to catch fish by the seashore. In order to do this, the long-armed man, tenaga, climbs onto the back of the long-legged man, ashinaga. The ashinaga then wades out into the shorewaters, staying above water with his long legs, while the tenaga uses his long arms to grab fish from his partner's back.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).