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the folklore of
noun
The tales, legends and superstitions of a particular ethnic population.
Exact(59)
The folklore of every culture is full of such explanations.
And we want it to become part of the folklore of the urban art scene".
In the folklore of France, it is une piaf, the argot for sparrow.
"It should forever be part of the folklore of the place".
While he mapped and botanized, he also collected the folklore of the native Inuit.
It is a mystical rapture that might be part of the folklore of those days.
What images would capture the folklore of the volcano and how the residents view it?
If he hadn't sent the boy to the headmaster's office, the folklore of the band might have been very different.
As Mr. Murray put it, they had simply countered "the folklore of white supremacy" with "the fakelore of black pathology".
It had become a piece of the folklore of Ikaria, proof of its exceptional way of life.
His rivalry with two Britons, Murphy and Mike Read, became part of the folklore of the sport.
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