Tzitzimime are uniformly female, though males do exist in the species, but one cannot tell easily. They have ash-grey skin, stretched and papery-thin like that of an ancient corpse. Their eyes glow blue, and from their heads grow thick manes of black hair, woven through with thin paper streamers. They have the claws of jaguars for fingers, those of eagles for toes. Their only clothing are shell skirts and capes of bones, and they tend to wear the body parts of their victims as jewelry.
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| - Tzitzimime are uniformly female, though males do exist in the species, but one cannot tell easily. They have ash-grey skin, stretched and papery-thin like that of an ancient corpse. Their eyes glow blue, and from their heads grow thick manes of black hair, woven through with thin paper streamers. They have the claws of jaguars for fingers, those of eagles for toes. Their only clothing are shell skirts and capes of bones, and they tend to wear the body parts of their victims as jewelry.
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| - Tzitzimime are uniformly female, though males do exist in the species, but one cannot tell easily. They have ash-grey skin, stretched and papery-thin like that of an ancient corpse. Their eyes glow blue, and from their heads grow thick manes of black hair, woven through with thin paper streamers. They have the claws of jaguars for fingers, those of eagles for toes. Their only clothing are shell skirts and capes of bones, and they tend to wear the body parts of their victims as jewelry.
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