View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Fairyland.

Fairyland

Fairyland meaning

The land or abode of fairies. | Any place of great natural beauty, or having a magical atmosphere.

Example sentences (16)

Fairyland Loop (4–5 hours, Fairyland Point) and Peekaboo Loop (3–4 hours, Bryce Point) are strenuous hikes.

Director, screenplay: Andrew Durham, adapted from the book "Fairyland: A Memoir of My Father" by Alysia Abbott.

And if not heaven, they certainly transform the forest into a fairyland.

A Rangiora Light and Sound Festival is planned for Victoria Park over four nights, complete with a fairyland of talking trees, disco lights, music, dancing lights, interactive lighting displays, and smoke and bubble machines.

Visitors are able to hike the entire 5.5 miles along the canyon rim from Fairyland Point to Bryce Point, and into Queens Garden at Sunrise Point.

While the residents were busy rebuilding after the floods, the official media of the reported that the river in the ancient town was surrounded by mist and looked like a fairyland.

Cornier’s movement not only turns Coyo Taco into a fairyland but also highlights important topics in the Latin community.

The baseball parade will take place April 14, from Fairyland School to The Commons.

After the passage of 25 years, the fairies, still missing Iolanthe deeply, plead with their Queen to pardon Iolanthe and to restore her place in fairyland ("Tripping hither, tripping thither").

Gervinus also wrote on where the fairyland of the play is located.

In 1948 Bestime released four jigsaw puzzles featuring her characters, and the first Enid Blyton board game appeared, Journey Through Fairyland, created by BGL.

In the opera, the fairy Iolanthe has been banished from fairyland because she married a mortal; this is forbidden by fairy law.

McAuley has also used biotechnology and nanotechnology themes in near-future settings: Fairyland describes a dystopian, war-torn Europe where genetically engineered "dolls" are used as disposable slaves.

More than convert of marked but ungroomed skiing trails are available off of Fairyland, Paria, and Rim trails in the park.

The setting is not the fairyland of the imagination, where poetry produces consummation, nor is the setting laid in England, and historical accuracy is not a concern.

The story goes as follows: "In the early days of the cosmic cycle mankind lived on an immaterial plane, dancing on air in a sort of fairyland, where there was no need of food or clothing, and no private property, family, government or laws.