banshee

See also: Banshee

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Irish bean sí, from Old Irish ben síde (literally woman of the fairy mound). The term banshee entered English in 1771.

Pronunciation

  • (file)
  • IPA(key): /bænˈʃiː/, /ˈbænʃiː/

Noun

banshee (plural banshees)

  1. (Irish folklore) A female spirit, usually taking the form of a woman whose mournful wailing warns of an impending death.
  2. (derogatory) A noisy or ill-tempered woman.
    • 1936, John Thomas McIntyre, Steps Going Down, page 15:
      Where's this old banshee that runs the place?

Usage notes

  • A banshee was originally merely a fairy woman who sang a caoineadh (lament) for recently-deceased members of certain families. Translations of Irish works into English made a distinction between the banshee and other fairy folk that the original language and original stories do not seem to have, but from whence sprung the current image of the banshee.

Translations

See also

Anagrams


Portuguese

Noun

banshee f (plural banshees)

  1. (Irish folklore) banshee (a female spirit who warns of impending death)
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