- 看过 fairy story 的人也看了 :
- fable
- myth
- tale
- yarn
- fairy story
- ghost story
fairy story 的定义
- a story, usually for children, about elves, hobgoblins, dragons, fairies, or other magical creatures.
- an incredible or misleading statement, account, or belief: His story of being a millionaire is just a fairy tale.
fairy story 近义词
等同于 myth
等同于 old wives' tale
fairy story 的近义词 10 个
等同于 fairy tale
等同于 fable
等同于 fabrication
更多fairy story例句
- Today, those stories are effectively fairy tales — stories we tell ourselves to avoid confronting reality.
- For now, it seems like a fairy tale — the idea that Americans could choose to work or not work based on their desire, rather than the threat of starvation.
- We love the idea of debuting this musical — filled with beloved fairy tale characters — at a theater dedicated to the exploration of classic stories reframed for modern audiences.
- Cialdini, like a character in some ancient fairy tale, has found himself advising both sides of the bargaining table.
- It is often thought that fairy tales live on because they express unchanging truths about the human condition.
- As an example of good science-and-society policymaking, the history of fluoride may be more of a cautionary tale.
- But when the darkness closes in, we actually run to fairy tales and fables.
- Actually, rather like Gruber, we feel rather icky about fairy tales.
- Not that the demonstration had anything to do with this couple, whom Sarah seems to see as a fairy tale come to life.
- Were the fairy-tale true it really would shame the affluent west.
- But he was ignorant of that part of the horrid tale; and the Duke, in a milder voice, bade him rise.
- Never had Punch secured the telling of that tale with so little opposition.
- The tailor of the fairy tale with his "seven at a blow" is not in it with the gunnery Lieutenant of a battleship.
- Until very recently little has been known of the strange land in which the subject of this tale lives.
- The Elizabethan pipes were so small that now when they are dug up in Ireland the poor call them 'fairy pipes' from their tininess.