释义 |
Definition of tooth fairy in English: tooth fairynoun A fairy said to take children's milk teeth after they fall out and leave a coin under the child's pillow. 牙仙(传说中拿走孩子掉下的乳牙,并在枕头下放块硬币) Example sentencesExamples - I don't believe in ghosts or God, Father Christmas or the tooth fairy.
- Then you could put them under your pillow and the tooth fairy would give you money.
- They're just grown-up versions of the tooth fairy.
- I uncovered lots more money superstitions, including embedding silver coins in Christmas puddings, the tooth fairy, and the fact that actors are superstitious about using real money on stage.
- On the one hand, I'm completely devoid of religious sentiment, and indeed I find it bewildering that anyone past the age of eight could retain a belief in God any more than in Santa Claus or the tooth fairy.
- You may be one of those people who believes in the integrity and honesty of the entertainment industry, but I gave up that ghost before I even stopped believing in the tooth fairy.
- Why don't we have schools that teach children there is a tooth fairy or put Santa Claus Studies on the national curriculum, and be done with it?
- There was not a family value they did not stand for: Easter, Christmas holidays, the tooth fairy - you name it, they were for it.
- What ends up happening is she goes on a mission to rid the world of the tooth fairy because she doesn't want to lose her teeth and she believes the tooth fairy is responsible.
- In the other, a much younger girl comes down to breakfast with a coin the tooth fairy left under her pillow the night before.
- It's the biggest myth since the tooth fairy and Father Christmas.
- I remember one night, when my husband and I forgot to take my daughter's tooth from under her pillow and replace it with money from the tooth fairy.
- Closer still was a repetitive tock tock tock which I quickly guessed was my daughter tapping the table with coins from her second visitation of the tooth fairy.
- If you think we just don't have quite enough government interference in our lives, and you think the public services are run cheaply, honourably, and efficiently with minimal waste, and believe in the tooth fairy, vote any of the others.
- She put it under her pillow and the tooth fairy delivered… £10.
- My favourite characters were the tooth fairy and the bears.
- No, she was upset that I didn't bring the shattered fragments of my tooth back home and put them under my pillow in order to make a little money from the tooth fairy.
- Having denied the existence of anything mythological to my four children, from the zodiac down to the tooth fairy, I learn that it is advised to return to a quasi-Victorian world where sentimentality rules.
- But when he lost his first tooth, I helped him make a Lego tooth fairy bridge that the tooth fairy could climb up.
- Because I never want to take away the wonderful relationship that children have with - with the tooth fairy until they begin to question it themselves.
Definition of tooth fairy in US English: tooth fairynounto͞oTH ˈferētuθ ˈfɛri A fairy said to leave a gift, especially a coin, under a child's pillow in exchange for a baby tooth that has fallen out and been put under the pillow. Example sentencesExamples - I don't believe in ghosts or God, Father Christmas or the tooth fairy.
- Closer still was a repetitive tock tock tock which I quickly guessed was my daughter tapping the table with coins from her second visitation of the tooth fairy.
- My favourite characters were the tooth fairy and the bears.
- I remember one night, when my husband and I forgot to take my daughter's tooth from under her pillow and replace it with money from the tooth fairy.
- I uncovered lots more money superstitions, including embedding silver coins in Christmas puddings, the tooth fairy, and the fact that actors are superstitious about using real money on stage.
- Then you could put them under your pillow and the tooth fairy would give you money.
- You may be one of those people who believes in the integrity and honesty of the entertainment industry, but I gave up that ghost before I even stopped believing in the tooth fairy.
- In the other, a much younger girl comes down to breakfast with a coin the tooth fairy left under her pillow the night before.
- But when he lost his first tooth, I helped him make a Lego tooth fairy bridge that the tooth fairy could climb up.
- Why don't we have schools that teach children there is a tooth fairy or put Santa Claus Studies on the national curriculum, and be done with it?
- She put it under her pillow and the tooth fairy delivered… £10.
- It's the biggest myth since the tooth fairy and Father Christmas.
- There was not a family value they did not stand for: Easter, Christmas holidays, the tooth fairy - you name it, they were for it.
- If you think we just don't have quite enough government interference in our lives, and you think the public services are run cheaply, honourably, and efficiently with minimal waste, and believe in the tooth fairy, vote any of the others.
- They're just grown-up versions of the tooth fairy.
- What ends up happening is she goes on a mission to rid the world of the tooth fairy because she doesn't want to lose her teeth and she believes the tooth fairy is responsible.
- Because I never want to take away the wonderful relationship that children have with - with the tooth fairy until they begin to question it themselves.
- On the one hand, I'm completely devoid of religious sentiment, and indeed I find it bewildering that anyone past the age of eight could retain a belief in God any more than in Santa Claus or the tooth fairy.
- No, she was upset that I didn't bring the shattered fragments of my tooth back home and put them under my pillow in order to make a little money from the tooth fairy.
- Having denied the existence of anything mythological to my four children, from the zodiac down to the tooth fairy, I learn that it is advised to return to a quasi-Victorian world where sentimentality rules.
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