Phantasy Spelling: Difference between revisions

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* Also lampshaded in [[Kim Newman]]'s [[Diogenes Club]] story "The Gypsies in the Wood", featuring a series of children's stories about faeries (including ''The Aerie Faerie Annual''). One character rhetorically asks what's wrong with the word "fairy".
* Also lampshaded in [[Kim Newman]]'s [[Diogenes Club]] story "The Gypsies in the Wood", featuring a series of children's stories about faeries (including ''The Aerie Faerie Annual''). One character rhetorically asks what's wrong with the word "fairy".
* Averted in ''[[Goblin Moon]]'' (the first volume of Teresa Edgerton's ''Mask and Dagger'' series), where "fairy" is the name of the race, while "Fae" and "Farisee" are apparently two different ''nationalities'' within that race. (The Biblical overtones of the latter may be intentional, as some of [[Teresa Edgerton]]'s nonhuman cultures are analogs to real-world human cultures.)
* Averted in ''[[Goblin Moon]]'' (the first volume of Teresa Edgerton's ''Mask and Dagger'' series), where "fairy" is the name of the race, while "Fae" and "Farisee" are apparently two different ''nationalities'' within that race. (The Biblical overtones of the latter may be intentional, as some of [[Teresa Edgerton]]'s nonhuman cultures are analogs to real-world human cultures.)
* In ''[[Wicked Lovely]]'', they are commonly refferd to as the fey, one on its own is a faery. The world is faerie.
* In ''[[Wicked Lovely]]'', they are commonly referred to as the fey, one on its own is a faery. The world is faerie.


=== [[Live-Action TV]] ===
=== [[Live-Action TV]] ===