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Folklority reusable prompt/ link

December 31, 2025
in Knowledge Base

NOTE: After generating your aticle, you must review for accuracy. Feed it back to chatgpt to give u accuracy review. you must know the percentage. It must not be less than 89.

Write a Folklority Knowledge Base article

This article must explain the concept accurately and responsibly, without telling or retelling any folktales.

CRITICAL REQUIREMENTS:

  • Do NOT invent facts, theories, or historical claims.
  • Base explanations only on well-established folklore, anthropology, cultural studies, or oral tradition scholarship.
  • If a claim is uncertain, disputed, or varies by culture, clearly state that.
  • Do NOT speculate or generalise beyond what is supported by sources.

Guidelines:

  • Tone: clear, neutral, authoritative, and accessible (not academic jargon, not casual).
  • Audience: general readers, students, educators, and cultural researchers.
  • Length: 500–700 words.
  • Purpose: explanation and understanding, not storytelling.

Structure the article using the following sections (use clear headings):

  1. Introduction
    Briefly explain what the concept is and why it matters in folklore studies and traditional storytelling.
  2. Clear Definition
    Provide a precise, widely accepted definition grounded in folklore scholarship.
  3. How the Concept Functions in Folklore
    Explain how this concept operates within folklore systems and oral traditions, using general patterns rather than specific stories.
  4. Cultural Importance
    Explain why this concept matters to communities, cultural continuity, and traditional knowledge systems.
  5. Common Misunderstandings
    Clarify what this concept is often confused with and correct common misconceptions using scholarly perspectives.
  6. Modern Relevance
    Explain why this concept remains relevant today in education, cultural preservation, or cultural understanding.

Sources (required section at the end):

  • Include 3–6 authoritative sources.
  • Use recognised references such as:
    • folklore encyclopedias
    • academic books or journals
    • university or museum publications
    • UNESCO or cultural heritage resources
  • Format sources as a simple list with title, author (if applicable), and publisher or institution.
  • Do NOT fabricate sources.

STRICT RULES:

  • Do NOT include folktale retellings or story summaries.
  • Do NOT list named characters or creatures.
  • Do NOT use listicles, rankings, or opinionated language.
  • Do NOT mention SEO, Google, or backend tools.
  • Accuracy and clarity are more important than creativity.

The article should feel trustworthy, timeless, and aligned with Folklority’s role as a folklore knowledge and discovery platform.

“{INSERT ARTICLE TITLE}”.

LINK TO BE ADDED TO EACH ATICLE

See how this concept appears in traditional stories across our connected archives.

  • African folktales
  • Folktales of the Americas
  • United States folktales
  • Asian folktales
  • European folktales
  • Oceanian folktales
  • Old Folklore
  • Old Folktales
  • All Fairies

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