Folklores [noun]
Definition of Folklores:
tales from the past
Sentence/Example of Folklores:
An enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation tribe, Hobson weaves his community’s folklore into the story of the Echota family, whose lives have been tragically altered by the death of their son.
Disinformation—whether it’s gang folklore or rumors of election intimidation—is almost always most effective at a local level.
Throughout the weekend, there will be more online presentations about folklore, crafts and cuisine associated with the holiday.
They’re stored in the minds of a small circle of people who learned their subfield of math from people who learned it from the person who invented it — which is to say, it exists nearly as folklore.
She would go on to star in American children’s picture books and folklore collections for decades.
John and Judas became the good and evil Wandering Jews of mediæval folklore.
His name is less romantic than those of the wonted demons of legend and folklore.
The making of folklore is not, however, extinct in Spain, a country where poetry seems to be an inherent faculty.
In the folklore of north Germany the Brocken holds an important place, and to it cling many legends.
Iv course there's such folklore as Epicbaulus in Marsupia an' th' wurruks iv Hyperphrastus.