Fairylands [noun]
Definition of Fairylands:
ideal place and life
Sentence/Example of Fairylands:
Even now, at 9, she has one foot in reality and the other in a kind of fairyland, and sometimes the boundaries between the two are hard to define.
To address Fleurette, impalpable creation of fairyland, as “old girl” was particularly distasteful.
"Why, she was very old and was all dried up and withered before Oz became a fairyland," explained the Scarecrow.
A coach and four, a Cinderella coach, would be the 28 only suitable equipage in which to make this journey into fairyland.
It is neither the amiable fairyland of Callot nor the bourgeois pessimism 53 of Hogarth.
Silent like a cloud, the group moves onward—a sweet-scented apparition from fairyland.
"There is no such thing as reason in Fairyland," she said stiffly.
No fairy widower with any self-respect could put up with such conduct as this; and Cherry has to quit Fairyland.
The changeling himself in one of Lady Wilde's tales directs his foster-mother to Fairyland.
There the visit to Fairyland was of a more voluntary character, and the hero was able to go to and fro as he pleased.