I was asking about it being fairies, not fae, unseelie or aes si.Since always, the undead thing is a modern interpritation popularised in video games and D&D when dulahans and haunted armour became fairly synomimous.
Rather than go into details and potentally confuse, fae mostly come in two catagories, the Seele fae which range from benevolent to at least indifferent toward humans, such as brownies and knockers, and the unseele fae which are always manevolent, such as dulahans and redcaps.
Of course riling up even the Seele fae ended horribly because fae.
the horse stealing is still going on, they aren't dead or anything.for the head honcho is probably connections, and also probably the fact that most of them is either crippled or died, they went against a horse that will decapitate you
the horse stealing is still going on, they aren't dead or anything.
GNU Terry Pratchett.Fairies are wonderful. They provoke wonder.
Fairies are marvellous. They cause marvels.
Fairies are fantastic. They create fantasies.
Fairies are glamorous. They project glamour.
Fairies are enchanting. They weave enchantment.
Fairies are terrific. They beget terror.
Fae is a catch all term for all types of fairies, I was just adding they one of the more manevolent group of them (the unseele)I was asking about it being fairies, not fae, unseelie or aes si.
Not quite. Fae and fairies are not synonyms, though I would have agreed if you said that they are very related terms. And in much modern usage, fae would be considered a superset of the set that is fairies - though the more classical definitions are different.Fae is a catch all term for all types of fairies,
I think I were the one to mention the unseelie [court] first?I was just adding they one of the more manevolent group of them (the unseele)
To comment about how it’s been a bit. That’s the same as asking you what’s the point to responding to such a message? Let the person speak.then re-read it or drop it? what use it there to writing this comment?
Yooo daaamn
I think you was yes, I was trying to explain simply without writing a wikipedia article so it was worth mentioning again.Not quite. Fae and fairies are not synonyms, though I would have agreed if you said that they are very related terms. And in much modern usage, fae would be considered a superset of the set that is fairies - though the more classical definitions are different.
I think I were the one to mention the unseelie [court] first?