In the Iwami region of
Shimane Prefecture, the "nure-onna" is a mysterious water being used by
ushi-oni, and it would appear by the sea and hand over a baby it is hugging to someone and then return to the sea, whereupon an ushi-oni would appear. The person who was requested to hold the baby would usually then try to throw the baby and run away, but by then, the baby would have turned into a heavy stone that would not separate. The person would then be killed and eaten by the ushi-oni, according to legend. Therefore, it is said that if one is asked to hug a baby, one ought to do so only after putting on gloves, and when fleeing, one ought to toss everything, including the gloves. In the legends of
Ōda, Shimane, a man entrusted with a baby from the nure-onna would be assaulted by an ushi-oni, and just when it seems like he lost their trail, the ushi-oni would then say "too bad, too bad," and it'd be in the same voice as the nure-onna. In classical yōkai depictions such as the
Gazu Hyakki Yagyō and
Hyakkai Zukan, the nure-onna would have a human face and a snake body, and the concept of feminine water turmoil is generally symbolized with the snake, but in certain tales about the nure-onna, they would appear as an
ubume who would make people hug babies. Both of them would hand over a baby symbolizing impurity and chaos, and both of them would lead humans to their deaths. ==Mythology==