| fairy | 1. Enchantment; illusion. "The God of her has made an end, And fro this worlde's fairy Hath taken her into company." (Gower) 2. The country of the fays; land of illusions. "He [Arthur] is a king y-crowned in Fairy." (Lydgate) 3. An imaginary supernatural being or spirit, supposed to assume a human form (usually diminutive), either male or female, and to meddle for good or evil in the affairs of mankind; a fay. See Elf, and Demon. "The fourth kind of spirit [is] called the Fairy." (K. James) "And now about the caldron sing, Like elves and fairies in a ring." (Shak) 5. An enchantress. Fairy of the mine, an imaginary being supposed to inhabit mines, etc. German folklore tells of two species; one fierce and malevolent, the other gentle, See Kobold. "No goblin or swart fairy of the mine Hath hurtful power over true virginity." (Milton) Origin: OE. Fairie, faierie, enchantment, fairy folk, fairy, OF. Faerie enchantment, F. Feer, fr. LL. Fata one of the goddesses of fate. See Fate, and cf. Fay a fairy Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| fairy | small, human in form, playful, having magical powers |
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| fairy | offensive terms for an openly homosexual man |
| fairy | of or pertaining to or resembling (especially in delicacy) a fairy or fairies |
| fairy | very small Argentine armadillo with pale silky hair and pink plates on head and neck |
| fairy | tall leafy European biennial or perennial having spectacular clusters of large tubular pink-purple flowers |
| fairy | fruit-eating mostly brilliant blue songbird of the East Indies |
| fairy | a ring of fungi marking the periphery of the perennial underground growth of the mycelium |
| fairy | miterwort of northeastern North America usually with two opposite leaves on erect flowering stems that terminate in erect racemes of white flowers |
| fairy | a scarlet European fungus with cup-shaped ascocarp |
| fairy | any of several plants of the genus Calochortus having egg-shaped flowers |
| fairy | (British) a small colored light used for decoration (especially at Christmas) |
| fairy | a ring of fungi marking the periphery of the perennial underground growth of the mycelium |
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