thumb|Boginka in Mullein by [[Jacek Malczewski (1888) ]] In Polish pagan mythology, boginki (singular: boginka) are female spirits or demons of wild nature: forest, field, mountains, or water (both of land and sea) and is often a personification of the forces of nature. The word literally means "minor goddess" in Polish and may be translated as "fairy" or "nymph". They were usually imagined as either ugly old hags or pretty young girls, usually naked. They are usually evil.
thumb|Boginka in Mullein by [[Jacek Malczewski (1888) ]] In Polish pagan mythology, boginki (singular: boginka) are female spirits or demons of wild nature: forest, field, mountains, or water (both of land and sea) and is often a personification of the forces of nature. The word literally means "minor goddess" in Polish and may be translated as "fairy" or "nymph". They were usually imagined as either ugly old hags or pretty young girls, usually naked. They are usually evil.
Some boginki are rusałka, vila, dziwożona, łaskotałka, , or nawka. The term "boginka" started to be applied to any of them.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).