faerie

[ UK /fˈe‍əɹi/ ]
NOUN
  1. the enchanted realm of fairies
  2. a small being, human in form, playful and having magical powers
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How To Use faerie In A Sentence

  • His features were, in the manner of his Faerie-born race, as sharp as chiseled stone, and his ears were acutely pointed.
  • As Matthew Woodcock points out, there have been many studies of queenliness in Spenser's The Faerie Queene, but very few that made sense of the poet's use of fairy.
  • Coinciding with the moon landing of Apollo 11, the gates of Faerie flood open and Trods and balefires reawaken.
  • At first, he thought he had finally lost his mind, and was seeing faeries and sprites.
  • Or on the verge where, as faeries know, the grass is always greener? Times, Sunday Times
  • He did sometimes express amazement that some of the great canonical books (The Faerie Queene comes to mind) were taken seriously; this was part of his conversational charm.
  • When she is forcibly enchanted by a man she is tailing for her faerie liege lord, she not only loses fourteen years of her life to being a fish, she loses everything she worked for in the human world, including her family. Rosemary and Rue: A Knight in Shining…Satin? « A Working Title
  • (link) Nice juxtaposition of this book (Do you believe in faeries?) and Fox Mulder! Slayground: Straight on 'til Morning by Christopher Golden
  • The faerie folk are mentioned in the medieval chronicles and go back even further; Chaucer describes them as something people ‘no longer’ believe in.
  • I've been leaving offerings for those doggoned iron faeries since last summer: candy, wine, chocolate, trinkets, you name it. Revenge of the Iron Fairies
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