Removed Notes section edit

I removed

  • Some wags and skeptics have recently dubbed the Tsul 'Kalu legend; "Help Jerry! My daughter has married a Bigfoot!"[citation needed]

from the article. I could not find it in any of my searches. If anyone else can find a verifiable source please add back in. Cougaria kit (talk) 23:53, 1 December 2012 (UTC)Reply

This article could use some work edit

What's up with the first paragraph? What's this "Mountain monsters third season", is it really central to this article? Is it important to note that it was "mentioned in the fourth season"? There's no link or reference of any kind to this "Mountain Monsters" or its third or fourth seasons. What a travesty! 176.72.191.47 (talk) 22:11, 11 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

Cherokee Devil how get rid of them edit

say Nani notch say That’s how you get rid of them 64.127.165.134 (talk) 21:35, 20 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Very much a boneappleteeth Moment 2600:8804:8609:6C00:9857:36E3:4470:BCED (talk) 00:46, 8 May 2023 (UTC)Reply

Native name not listed anywhere in the article edit

Nowhere in the current article is the native name of this creature, written in the Cherokee syllabary. The sources in this article (one of which doesn't work) also don't list it. This feels like a pretty big omission.
I ask partially because I find the current title of the article to be very odd, "Tsul 'Kalu" doesn't feel like it makes phonotactical sense in the Cherokee language which mostly has a CV (consonant followed by vowel) syllable structure (ironically, some of the English corruptions listed in this article, such as Tuli cula and Jutaculla, do make phontactical sense in Cherokee), so I think the current name used throughout the article might be due to a corruption made to sound "intentionally foreign" (the "Tsul`kälû' Tsunegûñ'yï" stuff with all those diacritics and apostrophes straight out of the "Guide To Make Your Language Sound Alien To English-spakers" almost certainly is). Pescavelho (talk) 19:05, 6 April 2024 (UTC)Reply