The word "fairy" in french is translated into "fee" with an accent acute on the first "e". To translate the word "Faery" from English to french is the exact same spelling. The word "faery" originates from the Celtic or Gaelic faeries and are associated with much wisdom. Thank you for believing!Sending sunshine,Susanne
conte means tale If you want to say fairy tale, you can say "conte de fées"
it means fairy.
occupé is how you say engaged in French
extatique is how you say ecstatic in french
Mal is how you say badly in French.
créer une fée
Old French faerie (Modern French féerie) :) Hope that helps, for the old french one you say it as you would normally say Fairy :)I choose to write faerie, more often than Fairy [;
"un livre pour enfants" is the common way to call children's books in French, or "un livre d'histoires pour enfants" if you want to be ultra-precise.
conte means tale If you want to say fairy tale, you can say "conte de fées"
neither English fairy tales are the best
"la" is french for "the" and "fayette" is french for " little fairy
The word I know is "un lutin", which can be used for either the fairy creature or the 2-dimensional images in a video game.
fairy wings = Feenflügel
In Esperanto, "fairy" is "feino."
Tatiana in French means fairy queen or princess
I would say yes if it was a nice fairy BUT if it is a bad fairy I say NO run home to yo mom if u see a bad fairy
The European name for fairy is typically "fée" in French, "fee" in German, or "fata" in Italian.