User:Rainbirdmeli/sandbox

La Llorona

Article Evaluation:

Taken from main article:

Morgana, a playable character in League of Legends, has a skin called "Ghost Bride" (named "La Llorona" in Spanish). She has different voiceover lines in the Latin American regions (North and South) and the skin was released as a way to celebrate the launch of Latin American servers.

Article Add On:

Adding to main article:

In 2019, BuzzFeed Unsolved released a video called The Hunt for La Llorona - The Weeping Woman, the video discussed the details of the legend of La Llorona, while traveling to different places in the United States looking for the weeping woman.

Article Evaluation

Taken from main article:

Natural history[edit]
The legend of La Llorona persists in areas where mountain lions are active. The Audubon Field Guide to North American Mammals notes that the mountain lion's "blood curdling mating call has been likened to a woman's scream."[citation needed]

Article Evaluation

Taken from main article

La Llorona also is a short film which was released in 2015. Legend

Challenged at the gates of heaven for the whereabouts of her children, she was not permitted to enter the afterlife until she finds them. Stuck between the land of the living and the dead, she spends eternity looking for her lost children. She is always heard weeping for her children, earning her the name "La Llorona."[1] It is said that if you hear her crying, you are to run the opposite way. If you hear her cries, they could bring misfortune or even death. Many parents in Latin America use this story to scare their children from staying out too late.[ ] In Mexican folklore, La Llorona ( pronounced [la ʝo.ˈɾo.na], "The Weeping Woman") is one of Mexico's most famous oral folklore. The lore states a woman was abandoned by her husband and was left alone to raise her two sons, out of grief and anger she threw her children into a river and killed them. As a result of her actions the woman is condemned to wander for all entirety until she finds the bodies of her children, often causing misfortune to those who are near or hear her. The story of La Llorona was first recorded before Cortés conquered Mexico. The oral story represents La Llorana as a person, legend, ghost, goddess, metaphor and symbol.