PANSY vs FAIRY: NOUN
- Large-flowered garden plant derived chiefly from the wild pansy of Europe and having velvety petals of various colors
- Offensive term for an openly homosexual man
- Offensive terms for an openly homosexual man
- A timid, weak man or boy; a wuss.
- A male homosexual, especially one who is effeminate.
- Any of various plants of the genus Viola, especially V. tricolor or its hybrids, widely cultivated for their flowers with velvety petals of various colors.
- A deep to strong violet.
- A deep purple colour, like that of the pansy.
- Common name for a cultivated flowering plant, Viola tricolor hortensis, derived from heartsease; many garden varieties are hybrids.
- A plant of the genus Viola (Viola tricolor) and its blossom, originally purple and yellow. Cultivated varieties have very large flowers of a great diversity of colors. Called also heart's-ease, love-in-idleness, and many other quaint names.
- A favorite species of violet, Viola tricolor; the heart's-ease.
- Used as a disparaging term for a man or boy who is considered effeminate.
- Used as a disparaging term for a gay man.
- A timid man or boy considered childish or unassertive
- Small, human in form, playful, having magical powers
- An imaginary being in human form, depicted as clever, mischievous, and possessing magical powers.
- Offensive terms for an openly homosexual man
- Offensive term for an openly homosexual man
- A small being, human in form, playful and having magical powers
- A nature spirit revered in modern paganism.
- A male homosexual, especially one who is effeminate.
- A mythical being who had magical powers, known in many sizes and descriptions, although often depicted in modern illustrations only as small and spritely with gauze-like wings; A sprite.
- The realm of faerie; enchantment, illusion.
- An imaginary being supposed to inhabit mines, etc. German folklore tells of two species; one fierce and malevolent, the other gentle, See Kobold.
- 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.
- Enchantment; illusion.
- Synonyms Fairy, Elf, Fay; Sylph, Gnome; Jinn, Genie; Goblin. Fairy is the most general name for a diminutive imaginary being, generally in human form, sometimes very benevolent or inclined to teach moral lessons, as the fairy godmother of Cinderella; sometimes malevolent in the extreme, as in many fairy stories. Spenser took up the word in Chaucer's spelling, faerie or faery, and gave it an extended meaning, which is now commonly confined to that spelling and to his poem; the personages in “The Faery Queene” live in an unlocated region, essentially like the rest of the world, and are of heroic and occasionally supernatural powers; these personages he sometimes calls elves or elfins. In ordinary use an elf differs from a fairy only in generally seeming young, and being more often mischievous. Pope, in “The Rape of the Lock,” has given a definite cast to sylph and gnome; these two words are elsewhere often associated, gnomes having always been fabled as living in underground abodes, and especially as being the guardians of mines and quarries, while sylphs are denizens of the air. From this difference of place it has followed that gnomes are generally thought of with repugnance or dread, and sylphs, although of both sexes in literature, are popularly thought of as young, slender, and graceful females: hence the expression “a sylph-like form.” To Oriental imagination is due the jinn, djinn, or jinnee; the form genie is most vividly associated with the “Arabian Nights”: as, the genie of Aladdin's lamp; the genie that the fisherman let out of the bottle. A goblin is wicked, mischievous, or at least roguish, and frightful or grotesque in appearance. See the definitions of kobold, sylph, brownie, banshee, sprite, pixie, nixie, nymph, etc.
- An enchantress.
- Fairy-land; elf-land.
- Fays collectively; fairy folk.
- An imaginary being or spirit, generally represented as of a diminutive and graceful human form, but capable of assuming any other, and as playing pranks, frolicsome, kindly, mischievous, or spiteful, on human beings or among themselves; a fay.
- Enchantment; magic.
- Used as a disparaging term for a gay man.
- The country of the fays; land of illusions.
PANSY vs FAIRY: ADJECTIVE
- Wimpy; spineless; feeble.
- Given by fairies.
- The Euoropean little tern (Sterna minuta); -- called also sea swallow, and hooded tern.
- See under Bluebird.
- A European swallow (Hirrundo ariel) that builds flask-shaped nests of mud on overhanging cliffs.
- The circles formed in grassy lawns by certain fungi (as Marasmius Oreades), formerly supposed to be caused by fairies in their midnight dances; also, the mushrooms themselves. Such circles may have diameters larger than three meters.
- A European fresh-water phyllopod crustacean (Chirocephalus diaphanus); -- so called from its delicate colors, transparency, and graceful motions. The name is sometimes applied to similar American species.
- An echinite.
- Of or pertaining to fairies.
PANSY vs FAIRY: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Offensive term for a homosexual man
- Offensive term for a homosexual man
- Pertaining to or in some manner connected with fairies; done by or coming from fairies. See phrases below.
- Resembling in some way a fairy; hence, fanciful, graceful, whimsical, fantastic, etc.: as, fairy creatures or favors.
PANSY vs FAIRY: RELATED WORDS
- Dianthus, Fag, Faggot, Violet, Fagot, Viola tricolor hortensis, Poove, Queer, Pouf, Poof, Fairy, Milksop, Milquetoast, Pantywaist, Sissy
- Fantasy, Coven, Magician, Fairytale, Angel, Elf, Witch, Queer, Poove, Pouf, Pansy, Poof, Sprite, Faery, Faerie
PANSY vs FAIRY: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Petunia, Dianthus, Fag, Faggot, Violet, Fagot, Poove, Queer, Pouf, Poof, Fairy, Milksop, Milquetoast, Pantywaist, Sissy
- Mythology, Fantasy, Coven, Magician, Fairytale, Angel, Elf, Witch, Queer, Poove, Pouf, Poof, Sprite, Faery, Faerie
PANSY vs FAIRY: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Free pattern for quilted pansy table topper security forces have.
- Smoked a cigarette while Pansy went up to her roof.
- Pansie is a variant of the English name Pansy.
- Ligabo, M Haraszti, I Alvarez and F Pansy Tlakula.
- At what time should the pansy seed be planted?
- Not a pansy like those effette, coastal elites!
- Pansy told me what it was all about.
- Tell thi summat for nowt soft southern pansy.
- Very good, Pansy, you remembered the safe word.
- It also comes in nimbus gray and pansy.
- By pressing the button on her special princess fairy base, she will enchantingly lift off into fairy flight.
- Add a sprinkling of fairy dust to your railway network with this wooden Fairy Accessory Expansion Pack.
- Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok Joo sprinkles some serious fairy dust across this lovable Korean drama.
- Fairy so that will make things more difficult, although he knows no Fairy type moves.
- Now you can be the next fairy tale extraordinaire by writing your own fairy tales.
- Fairy Godmother and operated by Fairy Godmothers in Training.
- See more ideas about fairy tail, anime fairy, fairy tail anime.
- THE FAIRY CURATE Once a fairy Light and airy Married with a mortal; Men, however, Never, never Pass the fairy portal.
- Iike to tell you a fairy tale from the book of fairy tales, as told by old fairy.
- Fairies nibble fairy fodder Wines from vines, and fairy cakes Fairy sons and fairy daughters Love to live by streams and lakes.
PANSY vs FAIRY: QUESTIONS
- What is Pansy Parkinson's plan to make Hermione pregnant in Harry Potter?
- Why did Pansy feel faint at the idea of losing her virginity?
- Is it possible for Pansy to be interested in Hermione?
- What does Pansy Parkinson say to help Harry Potter?
- What triggers the release of luciferin in sea pansy?
- What happened to Pansy and lavender in Harry Potter?
- Is Dolly Parton really Miley Cyrus' Fairy Godmother?
- Are Brothers Grimm's fairy tales really fairy tales?
- Are indoor fairy Gardens better than outdoor fairy gardens?
- Is 'Fairy Tail 100 quest' the sequel for 'Fairy Tail'?
- What does Suzi the sleep Fairy do with the Tooth Fairy?
- How many fairy tales are there in the English fairy tales?
- Why was he summoned to Tooth Fairy Land in Tooth Fairy?
- How do you get the fairy to release the fairy from Hagrid?
- What kind of fairy is the Pirate Fairy in Peter Pan?
- Where is the fairy Resistance hideout in a fairy tale?