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We hope that this
glossary can help you further understanding many of the terms associated with
the paranormal; on this website or anywhere else you may come across them. It
can be used as a form of reference for our readers or someone who has had an
experience. We will continually add to it as time goes by.
Sources:
Paranormality.com
Glossary of Psi
National Paranormal
Research Nashville
Answers.com
ASSAP
A-E
F-J
K-O
P-T
U-Z
U
UFO

(paranormal) An Unidentified Flying Object,
or UFO, is the popular term for any aerial phenomenon that cannot immediately be
identified. Some definitions, such as the one used by the USAF, define a UFO as
an object unable to be identified after scrutiny, while other definitions define
an object as being a UFO from the time it is first reported as being
unidentified, even though most eventually turn out to be natural phenomena.
UFO Magazine

(paranormal) UFO, the Magazine is an
American magazine devoted to the subject of unidentified flying objects (UFOs)
and extraterrestrial life. It was founded in 1986 by Vicki C. Ecker and Sherrie
Stark, and is now edited by Nancy Birnes. It is the only magazine in print
devoted exclusively to UFO phenomena. It provides space for timely items of
interest, guest opinions, an archive of past articles from the magazine, and
editorials by Ecker, her husband Donald, the magazine's research director, and
publisher William J. Birnes.
USO

(paranormal) Used to designate an
apparently technological craft of unknown origin seen underwater (or entering or
leaving the water). Unidentified Submerged Objects are occasionally reputed to
have flown into and out of bodies of water that are choked with heavy ice
coverings as if the ice presents no barrier whatsoever. After these reports,
large holes have been observed that do not appear marked by catastrophic impact.
Some have proposed that these USOs possess the ability to melt ice at speed of
transit. Examples of this have occurred in Norway, Sweden and Russia, where
these objects have been reported flying into and out of the water in the area.
V
Vampire

(occult) Vampires are mythological or
folkloric beings that are renowned for subsisting on human blood or life-force,
but in some cases may prey on animals. Although vampires have different
characteristics depending on which lore one reads, in most cases, they are
described as reanimated corpses who feed by draining and consuming the blood of
living beings. The term was popularized in the early 18th century and arose from
the folklore of southeastern Europe, particularly the Balkans and Greece.
Vigil

(paranormal) One or more vigils often form
part of the investigative process. They are often, but not exclusively, held at
night, partly due to restrictions on access to premises during the working day
and partly due to the type of phenomena being investigated. Some phenomena
involving light can be difficult to see in daylight. Small teams of
investigators are positioned at various sites around the building, preferably
within eye contact of other team members. Each vigil is split into ‘watches’,
with teams coming off duty and swapping position with other teams at regular
intervals. Team members write up notes during the watch, and after the vigil a
debriefing session is held in order to cross-check time-tables and other details
of any events.
Voodoo

(occult) This religion developed from the
animistic religions that enslaved West Africans took with them to the New World
and to which a sprinkling of Christianity was added. It is still widely
practiced in, among other countries, Haiti, where it was only recently
recognized as a religion by the government. The religious practices have little
connection with the flesh-eating zombies and curses prevalent in horror movies.
Vortex

(paranormal) An anomaly that appears as a
funnel or rope-like image in photographs. These images are sometimes thought to
represent ghosts, collections of orbs or gateways which travel to a wormhole in
time-space. There has been no substantial scientific evidence to support any of
these theories. Many photographs that depict these types of anomalies are
actually a stray camera strap or strand of hair that shows up when the photo is
developed.
W
Walk-ins

(paranormal) In 1979 popular New Age author
Ruth Montgomery identified an unknown phenomenon that had occurred to a variety
of unrelated individuals. They reported that the soul originally inhabiting
their body had vacated it so that another could "walk in" and take over. The
background of a person claiming to be a walk-in often contains a traumatic, even
life-threatening, event through which the person passed to a new, transformed
life. Some individuals suffered a medical crisis, often to the point of clinical
death and revival.
Warlock

(occult) A male version of a witch, wizard,
magician or conjurer. There is much debate about the real meaning of the word
among witches, many of whom find the term that is often applied to a male witch,
grossly offensive. The commonest definition of the word can possibly be traced
back to the old English or Scottish word, which many centuries ago, had the
meaning "oath breaker" or even "traitor". Exactly how the word became associated
with witches remains one of speculation. The term "oath breaker" may have been
applied to witches as they "broke their oaths with the Christian church".
Weeping Statues

(paranormal) A weeping statue is a statue
which has been observed to be shedding tears or weeping. Statues weeping tears
of a substance which appears to be human blood, oil, and scented liquids have
all been reported. Other phenomena are sometimes associated with weeping statues
such as miraculous healing, the formation of figures in the tear lines, and the
scent of roses. These events are generally observed by Christians. Reported
weeping statues are almost exclusively of the Virgin Mary.
Werewolf

(occult)
A human temporarily or permanently transformed into a wolf, from the Anglo-Saxon
wer (man) and wulf (wolf). It is a term used in the phenomenon of lycanthropy,
which in ancient and medieval times was of very frequent occurrence. It was in
Europe, where the wolf was one of the largest carnivorous animals, that the
superstition became prevalent. Similar tales in other countries usually
introduced bears, tigers, leopards, or other animals.
White Noise

(paranormal) An acoustical or electrical noise of which the intensity is
the same at all frequencies within a given band. In other words, the signal
contains equal power within a fixed bandwidth at any center frequency. White
noise draws its name from white light in which the power spectral density of the
light is distributed over the visible band in such a way that the eye's three
color receptors (cones) are rather equally stimulated.
Wicca

(occult) This Old English masculine noun
meaning ‘male witch, wizard’ was curiously misinterpreted by Gerald Gardner's
followers as an abstract noun meaning ‘witchcraft’, and is now the title of a
modern pagan movement which is both religious and magical. It was founded by
Gardner in the 1950s, who claimed it was an ancient cult preserved secretly by
persecuted but benevolent witches; it combined worship of a horned and phallic
god with that of a universal goddess, who is now the chief deity. Wiccans share
a belief in the importance of the feminine principle and a deep respect for
nature. They practice some form of ritual magic, almost always considered good
or constructive. Some are solitary practitioners; others belong to covens.
Witchcraft

(occult) A form of sorcery, or the
magical manipulation of nature for self-aggrandizement, or for the benefit or
harm of a client. This manipulation often involves the use of spirit-helpers, or
familiars. Public uses of magic are generally considered beneficial; sorcery, on
the other hand, is commonly practiced in private and is usually considered
malevolent.
X
Xenonormal

(paranormal) A natural phenomenon mistaken
to be of "paranormal" origin.
Y
Yeti

(paranormal) Also known as the
"abominable snowman," the yeti is the mysterious humanoid
creature reported by Western sources as early as 1832 as living
in the Himalayan Mountains. It became well known following
several expeditions to the area in the 1950s. In 1953 England's
Sir Edmund Hillary made history by leading an expedition that
took him, along with Tenzing Norgay of Nepal, to the top of
Mount Everest. On the way up he noticed giant footprints in the
snow that were said to belong to an apelike creature. Not only
did he not see an actual yeti, alive or dead, but even the
relics shown him proved to be something else. A shaggy fur hide
came from a Tibetan blue bear; a supposed scalp of a yeti came
from a serow. And it was noticed that footprints in the snow,
over time, tend to grow much larger than the original foot that
made them, thus accounting for the "yeti tracks" he had seen.
Hillary returned an unbeliever.
Yowie

(paranormal) Australian equivalent of the
yeti, or "Abominable Snowman." The first account of the yowie appeared in 1835
when a Mr. Holman said of his trip to the subcontinent, "The natives are greatly
terrified by the sight of a person in a mask calling him 'devil' or Yah-hoo,
which signifies evil spirit." By 1840, Australian scientists were debating
whether or not the yahoo was an imaginary being or a real, but rare, species. By
the 1880s European settlers began to report seeing something that resembled a
huge monkey or baboon. Through the first half of the twentieth century
occasional reports appeared, almost all from New South Wales and Queensland.
Along the way, "yahoo" became "yowie."
Z
Zen

(occult) A school of Mahayana Buddhism that asserts that enlightenment can
be attained through meditation, self-contemplation, and intuition rather than
through faith and devotion and that is practiced mainly in China, Japan, Korea,
and Vietnam.
Zener Cards

(paranormal) A pack of twenty-five cards bearing simple symbols in groups
of five of a kind: star, circle, square, cross, and waves, used in
parapsychology in testing extrasensory faculty under laboratory conditions. The
use of the Zener card pack dates from the work of J. B. Rhine in the Department
of Psychology at Duke University, North Carolina, from 1927 onward, first
reported in Rhine's Extrasensory Perception, published 1934 by the Boston
Society for Psychic Research. The Zener card pack was devised by Karl Zener
(1903-1963) of the psychology faculty at Duke University as a means of avoiding
preferences for individual playing cards during tests and in order to facilitate
evaluation of test scores. Having concluded that parapsychology as pursued by
Rhine was a threat to the psychology department, Zener later turned against
Rhine and joined with some colleagues in an attempt to have him removed from his
faculty position.
Zodiac

(occult) The zodiac, literally the circle of animals, is constituted by
the 12 stellar constellations through which the Sun appears to pass in its
annual movement through the heavens. The 12 constellations form a belt across
the night sky some 8 to 9 degrees on either side of the solar orbit. The Moon
and the planets of this solar system also move within that belt. The path of the
Sun is called the ecliptic as eclipses occur when the Moon's orbit crosses the
Sun's path.
Zombies

(occult) The word zombie refers to the ‘living dead’. In folklore zombies
are portrayed as innocent victims who are raised in a comatose trance from their
graves by malevolent sorcerers, and led to distant farms or villages where they
toil indefinitely as slaves. Zombies are recognized by their docile nature, by
their glassy empty eyes, and by the evident absence of will, memory, and
emotion. Part of their souls may also be captured by the sorcerers. Zombies can
only return to the world of the living upon the death of their masters. Accounts
are sometimes cited of actual people who have undergone this ordeal, were
declared dead, and later turned up at the homes of their kin in various degrees
of health. Sources indicate that the word is of African origin. The cadaver or
spirit of a deceased person is called zumbi in the Bonda language, ndzumbi in
Gabon, and nzambi in Kongo.

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