Baba Yaga

Etymology
Ultimately from, probably through.

Proper noun

 * 1)  In Russian, Finno-Ugric, Polish and Bulgarian tales, a hag who lives in a hut standing on chicken legs and who flies through the air in a mortar, using the pestle as a rudder. She behaves ambivalently and may be either amiable or hostile.

Translations

 * Arabic: بَابَا يَاجَا, بَابَا يَاجَا, بَابَا يَاغَا, بَابَا يَاغَا
 * Armenian: Բաբա Յագա
 * Azerbaijani: Küpəgirən qarı
 * Belarusian: Ба́ба-Яга́
 * Bulgarian: Ба́ба Я́га
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 芭芭雅嘎, 雅加婆婆, 巴巴亞加
 * Czech: Ježibaba, Baba Jaga, Baba Rohu
 * Danish: Baba Yaga
 * Dutch: Baba Jaga
 * Finnish: Baba Jaga
 * French:
 * Georgian: ბაბა იაგა
 * German:
 * Greek: Μπάμπα Γιάγκα
 * Hebrew: בַּאבָּה יַאגָה
 * Hindi: बाबा यागा
 * Hungarian:, vasfogú bába, baba-jaga
 * Italian: Baba Jaga
 * Japanese: バーバ・ヤーガ
 * Korean: ^바바 ^야가
 * Latvian: Baba Jaga
 * Macedonian: Ба́ба Ро́га, Ба́ба Ја́га
 * Marathi: बाबा यागा
 * Norwegian: Baba Jaga
 * Persian: بابا یاگا
 * Polish:, Baba Jędza, Baba Rogu
 * Portuguese: Baba Yaga, Baba Iaga
 * Romanian: Baba Iaga
 * Russian:, Ба́бка-Ёжка
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: Баба Јага, Баба Рога, Баба Зима
 * Roman: Baba Jaga, Baba Roga, Baba Zima
 * Slovak: Ježibaba, Baba Jaga
 * Slovene: Jaga baba
 * Spanish: Baba Yaga, Baba Yagá
 * Swedish: Baba-Jaga
 * Turkish: Baba Yaga,, Yeg, Yiğ
 * Ukrainian: Ба́ба-Яга́
 * Urdu: بابا یاگا
 * Vietnamese: Baba-Yaga
 * Yakut: Дьэгэ-Бааба

Etymology
Ultimately from, probably through.

Etymology
Ultimately from, probably through.