undine

[ US /ˈənˌdin/ ]
NOUN
  1. any of various female water spirits
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use undine In A Sentence

  • Something that could only be an undine stared into Kellen's eyes for a long moment before flitting away. Tran Siberian
  • I'll skip over asking them to see that themselves. undine commented at 1:33 PM~ Ferule & Fescue
  • Rilleta thought she saw the undine leaping among the water drops, her face alive as a fox's with mischief.
  • They came to a place where a small waterfall spilled down into a deep rocky catch-basin, which in turn overflowed to make the stream where he had seen the undine the day before. Tran Siberian
  • You might see gnomes; they're certainly there, along with undines.
  • Iuno, tene; tuque o puppem ne desere, Pallas: nunc patrui nunc flecte minas. cessere ratemque accepere mari. per quot discrimina rerum expedior! subita cur pulcher harundine crines velat Hylas? unde urna umeris niueosque per artus caeruleae vestes? unde haec tibi volnera, Pollux? quantus io tumidis taurorum e naribus ignis! tollunt se galeae sulcisque ex omnibus hastae et iam iamque umeri. quem circum vellera Martem aspicio? quaenam aligeris secat anguibus auras caede madens? quos ense ferit? miser eripe parvos, Post-Augustan Poetry From Seneca to Juvenal
  • Xenophon, in his Sympos. brings in Socrates as a principal actor, no man merrier than himself, and sometimes he would [3516] ride a cockhorse with his children. — equitare in arundine longa. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • But he has made money in some way and the hadj to Mecca is, you might say, made on the roller skates of his daughter, Undine, who for a good while has been dreaming about Fifth Avenue in her Apex backyard. Mrs. Wharton in New York
  • Was she salamander or sylph, naiad or undine, oread or dryad? There & Back
  • Minores etiam arundines nascuntur ad fluuii ripam, habentes in terra radices longitudinis trecentorum cubitorum aut plurium, Ad quarum nodos radicum, inueniuntur gemmæ preciosæ, de quibus expertum est, siquis vnam habuerit in pugno suo, ferrum corpori suo non nocebit: vnde si quis ibi pugnans, petat aduersarium, ac inimicum hac gemma munitum aggreditur eum cum fustibus non ferratis. The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy