Fate: The Winx Saga changes that formula by introducing six core elements that every fairy's magic connects to – fire, water, earth, air, light, and mind. Aisha's “waves” magic simply becomes water magic,...
Pixies and garden fairies are the two types of fairies that are most often seen in popular culture and media. However, this does not account for brownies, elves, gnomes, dwarfs, and a great many more beings.
Nymphs are female nature spirits from Greek mythology. Satyrs are their male counterparts. Slavic fairies come in several forms and their names are spelled differently based on the specific language.
There are many different types of fairies. Some examples are pixies, sprites, trolls, nymphs, brownies, tricksters, and elves. Most people will also think of Disney fairies as well.
Woodland faeries are a race of fairies that live in the woods of the world, often within the Old Woods. This race appears to go by several names, including 'fairy', 'faery', Fairie, among others.
A changeling, also historically referred to as an auf or oaf, is a human-like creature found in folklore throughout Europe. A changeling was believed to be a fairy that had been left in place of a human (typically a child) stolen by other fairies.
Halflings are the product of sexual union between a Faerie and a human.
It is believed that fairies (or the sidhe) live underground and in certain trees, namely the hawthorn. Even in modern times, one often sees a lone tree in the middle of a field; farmers and landowners are reluctant to cut down hawthorn trees for fear of disturbing the fairies.
Today a pixie is more or less the same as a fairy or sprite, but older folktales describe conflicts (and even wars) between these groups. The root of the word pixie is a mystery — it may be related to the Swedish dialect pyske, "small fairy," but it's probably rooted in an unknown Celtic word.
Signature. Tinker Bell, also nicknamed Tink or Miss Bell, is a Tinker-talent (also called pots-and-pans-talent) fairy and the main protagonist of the Tinker Bell movie series from 1 to 5.
Ellie: Meaning “beautiful fairy woman” in Greek. Elvina: Meaning “elf empress” in Old English.
Humans are also called as "Clumsies" by Never Fairy as they can harm fairies accidentally because of their sizes and babies lack of comprehension.
Maleficent is a powerful dark fairy and the titular main protagonist of the 2014 film Maleficent and its 2019 sequel, titled Maleficent: Mistress of Evil. Growing up as an orphan in the Moors, Maleficent believed herself to be the last of her kind.
brownie, in English and Scottish folklore, a small, industrious fairy or hobgoblin believed to inhabit houses and barns. Rarely seen, he was often heard at night, cleaning and doing housework; he also sometimes mischievously disarranged rooms.
Mab, also called Queen Mab, in English folklore, the queen of the fairies. Mab is a mischievous but basically benevolent figure. In William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, she is referred to as the fairies' midwife, who delivers sleeping men of their innermost wishes in the form of dreams.
slang, offensive : a gay person. used as a term of abuse and disparagement.
The Golden Fairy is a living attraction that brings a smile to everyone's faces. Big and little. Men and Women. Young and old alike. The Golden Fairy spreads love and joy with blinks and smiles and kisses and magical fairy dust.
Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather are the three good fairies in Walt Disney's 1959 film Sleeping Beauty.
Butterfly Fairies (spelt butterfly fairies since the 1998 series) are a species of animal fairies that inhabit the Butterfly Kingdom. They are considered to be the animal world equivalent to Americans in the 1998 series.
The tooth fairy also visits many other countries and goes by several names: Tönn ævintýri (Iceland), Tannfe (Norway), Tandfe (Sweden), and Zahnfee (Germany, Switzerland and Austria) just to name a few!
Bone Fey are (approximately) human-sized cousin species of the Tooth Fairies, they go through nature collecting the bones of fallen animals and humanoids, as well as from the bone piles outside of cities and towns.
Oberon. Famously known as the king of the fairies in William Shakespeare's A Midnight Summer's Dream, Oberon is married to Titania, the Queen of the Fairies.
In folklore and literature, the Fairy Queen or Queen of the Fairies is a female ruler of the fairies, sometimes but not always paired with a king. Depending on the work, she may be named or unnamed; Titania and Mab are two frequently used names.
One version of the Grimms' story begins with an invitation sent to 12 fairies to each give a blessing to a new-born princess. A thirteenth – and uninvited – fairy, hearing what the others are up to, turns up in a rage and delivers a curse rather than a blessing.