英単語

fairyの意味・使い方・発音

fairy

英 ['feərɪ] 美 ['fɛri]
  • n.妖精、ピクシー;かわいい女の子
  • adj.妖精

語源


妖精、妖精、ウサギ(ゲイの男性)。

PIE*bhaの「言う」「予言する」が語源で、語源的にはfable、fateと同じ。 -ryは地名接尾辞。もともとは予知能力を持つ妖精やエルフがいる場所を指したが、後に妖精全般を指すようになった。ゲイのスラングに使われる。

英語の語源


fairy
fairy: [14] Fairy is an Old French coinage. It comes from Old French faerie, which meant ‘enchantment, magic’ and was derived from fae ‘fairy’ (source of English fay [14]). This in turn came from the Latin plural fāta, used in personifying the Fates, three goddesses who in ancient mythology governed human destiny. The original notion of the French noun survives in the mock-medieval term faerie (introduced by Edmund Spenser in his Faerie Queene 1590), but in fairy itself it has been gradually replaced by the meaning of the word from which it was originally derived – fay.
=> fable, fame, fate
fairy (n.)
c. 1300, fairie, "the country or home of supernatural or legendary creatures; fairyland," also "something incredible or fictitious," from Old French faerie "land of fairies, meeting of fairies; enchantment, magic, witchcraft, sorcery" (12c.), from fae "fay," from Latin fata "the Fates," plural of fatum "that which is ordained; destiny, fate," from PIE *bha- "to speak" (see fame (n.)). Also compare fate (n.), also fay.
In ordinary use an elf differs from a fairy only in generally seeming young, and being more often mischievous. [Century Dictionary]
But that was before Tolkien. As a type of supernatural being from late 14c. [contra Tolkien; for example "This maketh that ther been no fairyes" in "Wife of Bath's Tale"], perhaps via intermediate forms such as fairie knight "supernatural or legendary knight" (c. 1300), as in Spenser, where faeries are heroic and human-sized. As a name for the diminutive winged beings in children's stories from early 17c.
Yet I suspect that this flower-and-butterfly minuteness was also a product of "rationalization," which transformed the glamour of Elfland into mere finesse, and invisibility into a fragility that could hide in a cowslip or shrink behind a blade of grass. It seems to become fashionable soon after the great voyages had begun to make the world seem too narrow to hold both men and elves; when the magic land of Hy Breasail in the West had become the mere Brazils, the land of red-dye-wood. [J.R.R. Tolkien, "On Fairy-Stories," 1947]
Hence, figurative adjective use in reference to lightness, fineness, delicacy. Slang meaning "effeminate male homosexual" is recorded by 1895. Fairy ring, of certain fungi in grass fields (as we would explain it now), is from 1590s. Fairy godmother attested from 1820. Fossil Cretaceous sea urchins found on the English downlands were called fairy loaves, and a book from 1787 reports that "country people" in England called the stones of the old Roman roads fairy pavements.

例文


1. The story ascends from a gothic tragedy to a miraculous fairy -tale.
物語はゴシック悲劇から不思議な童話に昇華した。

2.She was like a princess in a fairy tale.
彼女は童話のお姫様のようだ。

3. Fairy tales weren 't just meant for children.
おとぎ話は子供たちだけのものではありません。

4.Now tell me the truth:I don 't want any more of your fairy stories.
今は正直に言って、私はあなたのでたらめを聞きたくありません。

5.a fairy ?tale castle on an island
島にある不思議な城

頭文字