fairybook
English
editEtymology
editFrom fairy + book, perhaps a confusion of fairytale and storybook.
Noun
editfairybook (plural fairybooks)
- (rare) A book of fairytales.
- 1941 June, The Rotarian, volume 58, number 6:
- Once upon a time, as the fairybooks say, there was a swamp along the islands guarding Miami, Fla., from the sea.
- 1951, Robert Peter Tristram Coffin, On the green carpet:
- Their trunks were gnarled beyond belief, like those in fairybooks. They were covered with the cuneiform of woodpeckers and yellowhammers.
- 1991, William W Freehling, The Road to Disunion: Volume I: Secessionists at Bay, 1776-1854:
- His and Gertrude's was a fairybook marriage. The fairy tale ended quickly. After a miscarriage, Gertrude Thomas winced over pregnant black women slaving under the inhuman sun.