Titania
See also: titania
English
editEtymology
editA style of Diana in Ovid, fem. of titanius, from Titan. As faeries were identified with Classical nymphs, the queen of the faeries was equated with Diana.
Pronunciation
editProper noun
editTitania
- From Shakespeare's play A Midsummer-Night's Dream, the queen of the fairies.
- 1842 May 7, L'Etudiant, “The Rhine”, in The Mirror, volume 1, number 19, page 293:
- As it is impossible to believe that this huge mountain can produce such an effect, at the expiration of a few minutes we become dupes of illusion, and the most grave thinker is ready to swear that there is in those shades, under some fantastic thicket, a solitary— a supernatural being—a sort of fairy—a Titania, who amuses herself by delicately parodying the music of mortals, and throwing down the half of a mountain every time she hears the report of a gun.
- 1859, “Fairy Knowe”, in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, page 428:
- For all this Magical Mansion were vain With all its dominions so fair; Its splendor and riches no happiness gain Without a Titania to share!
- 1871 January, Daisy Ventnor, “Prince Charming Comes to Town”, in The Peterson magazine, volume 59, number 1, page 39:
- "Take breath," said Teresa, unable to help laughing. "Why, kitten, you're as good as a fairy-tale." "Inspired by Titania herself." said a gallant voice at her elbow; and Kate disappeared with a sly grimace, as Russell Wayne shook hands with Miss Amesford. "You never saw a dusky queen of the fairies, did you? A species of Brownie would be more like me, Mr. Wayne; you must wait until Alma comes home for a Titania."
- 2009, Jan S. Cronin, Simone Drichel, Frameworks: Contemporary Criticism on Janet Frame, page 30:
- But something is awry; the fairy-stories, the mythologies, are mixed up. Tom is less a masculine Pygmalion caressing his dream-statue into flesh than a feminine Galatea waking to see her lover's face blotting out the sun; less an Oberon than a Titania, falling in love with “the first person he had seen on waking from his drugged sleep”.
- (astronomy): The largest satellite of the planet Uranus.
Derived terms
editTranslations
editTurkish
editProper noun
editTitania
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- English 4-syllable words
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- English lemmas
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- en:Astronomy
- en:Moons of Uranus
- en:Fictional characters
- en:William Shakespeare
- Turkish lemmas
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- tr:Astronomy
- tr:Moons of Uranus