[
UK
/lˈɛpɹəkˌɔːn/
]
[ US /ˈɫɛpɝkaʊn/ ]
[ US /ˈɫɛpɝkaʊn/ ]
NOUN
- a mischievous elf in Irish folklore
How To Use leprechaun In A Sentence
- He recalled the leprechaun's meeting with the pixie on their first night out of Dvergamal, and only then did he make note of Mickey's remark that his magic was at its strongest in Robert's lair. The Woods Out Back
- The book is based on the story of a crafty 12-year-old Irish boy who is immersed in a world of fairies, leprechauns and gnomes.
- It wasn't often that Murdoch truly appreciated a practical joke but Johnny's contention that they had a leprechaun or a brownie in the house was too good to pass up.
- It means otherworldly stuff, like leprechauns and so on.
- In Irish folklore, the leprechaun had a large piece of gold.
- Yet, it does not explain why its proponents don't believe in unicorns, leprechauns or other such conjectural entities, all of which also lie outside the imagined boundaries of science.
- We saw a pixie and a leprechaun eating together.
- Sheedy, a master spruiker, was quick to declare on Thursday night: "It's nice to take a big leprechaun". NEWS.com.au | Top Stories
- One story is told of a man who saw a leprechaun bury a purse of gold in a field of ragwort.
- Unicorns, elves, leprechauns, phoenixes, griffins, and humans all existed very peacefully together on Earth, until evil was set loose.