WORD OF THE DAY
Fey \ FAY \
Definition
1: marked by a
foreboding of death or calamity
2a: marked by an otherworldly air or attitude
2b: crazy, touched
3 a: excessively refined : precious
3b: quaintly unconventional : campy
Examples
"Often I slipped into one of a few personas I had
invented to make myself feel more authentically magical. Sometimes I was
Cassandra, a husky-voiced Southern belle who called everyone 'honey child.'
Other times I became Gabriel, a fey mystic with an accent that I imagined to be
French-ish."
— Bennett Madison, The New York Times, 5 Sept. 2016
— Bennett Madison, The New York Times, 5 Sept. 2016
"What children get is something even better. They get a
Batman who isn't invulnerable and who needs his friends. They get a fey,
effeminate hero who is every bit as brave and talented as his mentor…."
— Louis McEvoy, Cherwell (Oxford University), 25 Feb. 2017
Did You Know?
Fey is a word that defies its own (original) meaning, since
it has yet to even come close to the brink of death after being in our language
for well over 800 years. In Old and Middle English it meant "feeble"
or "sickly." Those meanings turned out to be fey themselves, but the
word lived on in senses related to death, and because a wild or elated state of
mind was once believed to portend death, other senses arose from these.
The word fay, meaning "fairy" or "elf,"
may also have had an influence on some senses of fey. Not until the 20th
century did the word's most recent meanings, "precious" and
"campy," find their way into the dictionary.
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