Феи Club
Присоединиться
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
posted by lilylove89
The word fairy derives from Middle English faierie (also fayerye, feirie, fairie), a direct borrowing from Old French faerie (Modern French féerie) meaning the land, realm, или characteristic activity (i.e. enchantment) of the legendary people of folklore and romance called (in Old French) faie или fee (Modern French fée). This derived ultimately from Late Latin fata (one of the personified Fates, hence a guardian или tutelary spirit, hence a spirit in general); cf. Italian fata, Portuguese fada, Spanish hada of the same origin.

Fata, although it became a feminine noun in the Romance languages, was originally the neuter plural ("the Fates") of fatum, past participle of the verb fari to speak, hence "thing spoken, decision, decree" или "prophetic declaration, prediction", hence "destiny, fate". It was used as the equivalent of the Greek Μοῖραι Moirai, the personified Fates who determined the course and ending of human life.

To the word faie was added the suffix -erie (Modern English -(e)ry), used to express either a place where something is found (fishery, heronry, nunnery) или a trade или typical activity engaged in by a person (cookery, midwifery, thievery). In later usage it generally applied to any kind of quality или activity associated with a particular sort of person, as in English knavery, roguery, witchery, wizardry.

Faie became Modern English fay "a fairy"; the word is, however, rarely used, although it is well known as part of the name of the legendary sorceress морган le Fay of Arthurian legend. Faierie became fairy, but with that spelling now almost exclusively referring to one of the legendary people, with the same meaning as fay. In the sense "land where Феи dwell", the distinctive and archaic spellings Faery and Faerie are often used. Faery is also used in the sense of "a fairy", and the back-formation fae, as an equivalent или substitute for fay is now sometimes seen.

The word fey, originally meaning "fated to die" или "having forebodings of death" (hence "visionary", "mad", and various other derived meanings) is completely unrelated, being from Old English fæge, Proto-Germanic *faigja- and Proto-Indo-European *poikyo-, whereas Latin fata comes from the Indo-European root *bhã- "speak". Due to the identical pronunciation of the two words, "fay" is sometimes misspelled "fey".
added by Andreone93
added by sneggleblech
added by ilovekud
Source: ilovekud
added by lara1313
added by Nancy_Beth
added by bettieslayton57
posted by mogositymo12
 snowflake fairy!
snowflake fairy!
I was at my Друзья house and we were playing a game. We stopped for a while and.... WHOOOSH!!!!!! We saw something small flying by us!! It was to big to be a insect или a fly and too small to be a bird!!


I gasped and yelled out, "I saw a wooden shoe!". My friend looked at me for a секунда and saw little shoe-prints in the ground. We were creeped out for a little while and then we saw more. We followed it in the куст, буш and there it stopped. I peeked in-side it and nothing was there exept for some few sparkles.

"It could have been a humming bird?" My friend added, "We live iun a place where there...
continue reading...
added by ktichenor
added by Nancy_Beth
added by slamoreux_1
added by yorkshire_rose
Source: pinterest
added by Andreone93
added by ktichenor
Source: pinterest
added by yorkshire_rose
Source: pinterest
added by Princess-Yvonne
added by yorkshire_rose
Source: photobucket
added by yorkshire_rose
Source: photobucket
added by musicandmango
added by Princess-Yvonne
Source: meredithdillman
added by AdaLove
Source: deviantART