thumb|right|Gnome King Kyrië|Kyrie, the gnome king from the old folklore from the [[Campine, a region in the Dutch province of North Brabant.]] The '''''' () is a gnome-like creature in Dutch folklore. The Dutch is akin to the Irish leprechaun, Scandinavian or , the English hob, the Scottish brownie and the German or kobold.
thumb|right|Gnome King Kyrië|Kyrie, the gnome king from the old folklore from the [[Campine, a region in the Dutch province of North Brabant.]] The '''''' () is a gnome-like creature in Dutch folklore. The Dutch is akin to the Irish leprechaun, Scandinavian or , the English hob, the Scottish brownie and the German or kobold.
In the folklore of the Low Countries, kabouters are tiny people, about 10–15 cm tall, who live in or near houses and stables, or in hills, in forests or on heaths. Many stories refer to vast kabouter kingdoms with specific locations where they were seen more often or resided. In modern children's stories, Kabouters live in mushrooms or sometimes underground. Kabouters can be regarded as spirits who help in the home by doing tasks at night and care for the animals like milking them. Descriptions of kabouters vary throughout time and place. Often kabouters are associated with red squirrels. The males have long, full beards and they all wear tall, pointed hats, generally of a red or green colour. Kabouters are shy of humans and in stories often punish people for spying on them. Kabouters are sometimes associated with collecting gold or treasure, but this seems mostly connected to their association with lost objects. Often they would also steal livestock for themselves if those were left unattended by the farmers. Blinding was a common punishment for spying on the gnomes, but they could also make life more difficult by souring the milk, blackening the grain, making objects disappear, or scaring the livestock. Leaving milk and bread out for kabouters was a way to improve relationships with them. Kabouters could become very old and many are depicted with grey hair. Throughout Flanders and the Netherlands, they exist under a number of different local names such as or .
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).