Sluagh
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The Sluagh (Gallawan slúag, Carnish Gaelic Slúagh; Ænglish: 'host, army, crowd'), or Sluagh na marbh ('host of the dead'), were the hosts of the unforgiven dead in Carnish folklore. In the words of Carnish folklorist Lewis Spence, "In Carna the Sluagh, or fairy host, was regarded as composed of the souls of the dead flying through the air, and the feast of the dead at Hallowe'en was likewise the festival of the fairies." Usually taking a crescent form, similar to a flight of grey birds, they were said to be able to approach and pick up a person from any direction and then transport them far away through the air, from one area of Carna to another. Although they could sometimes rescue humans lost in the wilderness, they were generally portrayed as dangerous to mortals.
Etymology
The Carnish Gaelic name Slúagh stems from the Gallawan slúag (≈ slóg), meaning 'host, army; crowd, assembly'. Variant forms include slógh and sluag. It derives from the Proto-Celtic root *slougo-, whose original meaning may have been 'those serving the chief', by comparing with Baltic words that probably emerged from early linguistic contacts with Celtic speakers in Eastern and Southern Levantia: e.g. Orenstian slaugà ('service, servitude').