different between pixie vs puck

pixie

English

Etymology

Uncertain; see Wikipedia.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /?p?ksi/
  • Rhymes: -?ksi
  • Hyphenation: pix?ie

Noun

pixie (plural pixies)

  1. (mythology, fantasy literature, fairy tales) A playful sprite or elflike or fairy-like creature.
    Synonyms: brownie, fair, gnome, imp, sprite
    • 2005, Dan Keding, The Pixies’ Bed, Dan Keding, Amy Douglas (editors), English Folktales, page 98,
      Then she saw pixies — dozens and dozens of pixies — dancing and singing.
    • 2005, Kathryn Reyes, Mystery Door Manor and the Dragon Realm, page 72,
      When she looked around, Mary saw four pixies flying toward her. She had to jump out of the way to avoid being hit. Then the pixies turned around and attacked again.
    • 2007, Jeremy Phillips, The Wizardon Star, page 165,
      The servant that had raised him, an elderly pixie called Rolog, had died. On his deathbed he had called the young Captain to his side. Seeing the pixie dying had had no effect on him.
    • 2010, Sandra A. Filbin, The Enchanted World: A Tooth Fairy's Tale, page 49,
      Tiffy froze as the two pixies looked directly into each other's eyes.
      Then Tiffy raised her hand and said, “Hi, I'm Tiffy the Tooth Fairy.” Even though the other pixie lifted her hand too, she didn't answer.
  2. (slang) A cute, petite woman with short hair.
    • 2006, Darnell Arnoult, Sufficient Grace, page 186,
      Then a pixie appears in the visitor window, round face, big brown eyes framed in thick liner, a tiny turned-up nose, red lips, inch-long blue-black hair so popular with the avant-garde.
    • 2009, Nicole Baart, The Moment Between, page 1,
      Petite and narrow-waisted, with a pixie flip of hair the exact color of coffee beans, Abigail could easily pass for sixteen in a pair of ripped jeans and an Abercrombie T-shirt.
    • 2010, Mary Jo Ignoffo, Captive of the Labyrinth: Sarah L. Winchester, Heiress to the Rifle Fortune, page 196,
      Petite in the extreme, not even reaching five feet tall, Winchester at her most robust had approached one hundred pounds. No longer the bright-eyed, sophisticated pixie that Isaiah Taber had photographed so many years earlier, Winchester showed a different picture altogether as she lay dying, her fingers and toes knotted and knurled from years of destruction by the painful arthritis.
    • 2011, L. E. Newell, Durty South Grind, page 138,
      Like magic, Carla transformed from the dainty pixie into a hardcore, no-nonsense businesswoman right before his eyes.
  3. (astronomy, meteorology) An upper-atmospheric optical phenomenon associated with thunderstorms, a short-lasting pinpoint of light on the surface of convective domes that produces a gnome.

Alternative forms

  • pigsie (obsolete, Celtic mythology)
  • piskie
  • pisky
  • pixy

Derived terms

Translations

Further reading

  • pixie on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Dongxiang

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /p?i??i??/, [p?i???i??]

Etymology

From Proto-Mongolic *büse. Compare Mongolian ??? (büs)

Alternative forms

  • pijie

Noun

pixie

  1. belt

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puck

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: p?k, IPA(key): /p?k/
  • Rhymes: -?k

Etymology 1

From Middle English puke, from Old English p?ca (goblin, demon), from Proto-Germanic *p?kô (a goblin, spook), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)p?ug(')- (brilliance, spectre). Cognate with Old Norse púki (devil) (dialectal Swedish puke), Middle Low German sp?k, sp?k (apparition, ghost), German Spuk (a haunting). More at spook.

Noun

puck (plural pucks)

  1. (now rare) A mischievous or hostile spirit. [from 10th c.]
    • 2017, Ronald Hutton, The Witch, Yale University Press 2018, p. 232:
      William Tyndale allotted this character a role, of leading nocturnal travellers astray as the puck had been said to do since Anglo-Saxon times and the goblin since the later medieval period.
Synonyms
  • See goblin (hostile) and fairy (mischievous)
Derived terms
  • puckish

Etymology 2

From or influenced by Irish poc (stroke in hurling, bag). Compare poke (1861).

Verb

puck (third-person singular simple present pucks, present participle pucking, simple past and past participle pucked)

  1. (chiefly Ireland) To hit, strike. [from 19th c.]

Noun

puck (plural pucks)

  1. (ice hockey) A hard rubber disc; any other flat disc meant to be hit across a flat surface in a game. [from 19th c.]
    • 1886, Boston Daily Globe (28 February), p 2:
      In hockey a flat piece of rubber, say four inches long by three wide and about an inch thick, called a ‘puck’, is used.
  2. (chiefly Canada) An object shaped like a puck. [from 20th c.]
    • 2004, Art Directors Annual, v 83, Rotovision, p 142:
      He reaches into the urinal and picks up the puck. He then walk over to the sink and replaces a bar of soap with the urinal puck.
  3. (computing) A pointing device with a crosshair. [from 20th c.]
  4. (hurling, camogie) A penalty shot.
Derived terms
Descendants
  • ? Danish: puck
  • ? German: Puck
  • ? Swedish: puck
Translations
See also
  • Hockey puck on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Etymology 3

From the Irish poc (male adult goat, billy goat).

Noun

puck (plural pucks)

  1. (Ireland, rural) billy goat

Etymology 4

Blend of pike +? tuck

Noun

puck (plural pucks)

  1. (trampoline, gymnastics) A body position between the pike and tuck positions, with knees slightly bent and folded in; open tuck.

Swedish

Etymology

From English puck.

Noun

puck c

  1. puck

Declension

Further reading

  • puck in Svensk ordbok.

puck From the web:

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