Preditcabull is a light tan anthropomorphic ox Yo-kai with dark brown hair tied into a short ponytail styled as a cow's tail and round eyebrows. He wears a white kimono with pattern shades of dark teal, teal, and coral sea, held tight by a dull orange obi.
In Japanese, Predictabull ends all sentences with "moo" (モー). In English, he speaks in cow puns.
He can also be found between 10,000 and 19,999 yards in Hazy Lane.
He can also be found in Blasters T in the Masked Labyrinth, Pandora's Labyrinth, King Deadward's Labyrinth, Comic Genieus' Labyrinth, Bastnetnyan's Labyrinth, Komanubis' Labyrinth, The Boracle's Labyrinth and Rampajah's Labyrinth.
"Predictabull" is a portmanteau of predictable and bull.
"Métaurologue" is a portmanteau of "météorologue" (meterologist) and "taureau" (bull).
"Kuhrigella" is a portmanteau of "Uri Geller" and "Kuh" (cow).
"Torivinador" combines "Toro" (Bull) and "Adivinador" (Diviner).
"Bovindovino" is a portmanteau of "bovino" ("bovine") and "indovino" ("fortune-teller" or "soothsayer").
"Boitempo" is a portmanteau of "boi"("ox") and "tempo" ("time").
Origin[]
Predictabull is based on the Kudan (件; also its Japanese name), appearing as a cow with a human face. The name is written with the kanji for "matter", created by combining "human" and "cow". Though they don't live long, they are able to predict great misfortunes, and because of that, their image was popular through history as a good luck charm against disasters and sickness. They are pure-hearted creatures that never tell a lie, to the point that during the Edo period the phrase "as if a kudan said it" (件の如し kudan no gotoshi) was the rough equivalent of "straight from the horse's mouth"; although since the first use of the phrase far predates any depictions of the creature it was very likely an ad-hoc wordplay.
Trivia[]
His random names are: Teller, Fortune, Chang, and Trevor.
In other languages[]
Language
Name
Meaning
Japanese
くだん Kudan
From "kudan" (type of yokai with the body of a cow and the head of a man).
Spanish
Torivinador
From "toro" (bull) and "adivinador" (fortune-teller).
French
Métaureaulogue
From "météorologue" (meteorologist) and "taureau" (bull).
Italian
Bovindovino
From "bovino" (bovine) and "indovino" (fortune-guesser or soothsayer).
German
Kuhrigella
From "Kuh" (cow) and Uri Geller (Israeli-British magician and illusionist).