i Register
In some senses, fey is marked as archaic, obsolete, poetic, UK. Watch for register when choosing this word.
adj
About to die; doomed; on the verge of sudden or violent death.
Surely the Gods have made him fey, having ordained his destruction and our humbling before these Demons.
Then Fëanor laughed as one fey, and he cried: “None and none! What I have left behind I count now no loss; needless baggage on the road it has proved. Let those that cursed my name, curse me still, and whine their way back to the cages of the Valar! Let the ships burn!”
Dying; dead.
Possessing second sight, clairvoyance, or clairaudience.
Overrefined, affected.
His interlocutor was whimsical if not downright fey. He pushed his spectacles to the top of his nose. He shoved them into his greying locks like an effeminate racing driver. He gave Pym sherry and put a hand on his backside in order to propel him to a long window that gave on to a row of council houses.
Hoffman does not rely on his talent to carry him through a role. He spent five and a half months transmuting himself into Capote. … He lost 40 pounds and practiced the inscrutable voice and fey mannerisms for an hour or two every day.
Strange or otherworldly.
Gratefully she crooned with them, so inimitably that old Christine Inglis, on her way to early Mass, vowed the girl was fey.
adj
Magical or fairylike.
noun
A fairy.
Fairy folk collectively.