sylphlike
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]sylphlike (comparative more sylphlike, superlative most sylphlike)
- Resembling (that of) a sylph; slender and graceful.
- 1811, Percy Bysshe Shelley, chapter IV, in St. Irvyne[1]:
- Soon advancing through the hall, he saw the sylphlike figure of the lovely Olympia […]
- 1821, Lord Byron, Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice[2], act IV, lines 57–61:
- […] the thin robes
Floating like light clouds ’twixt our gaze and heaven;
The many-twinkling feet so small and sylphlike,
Suggesting the more secret symmetry
Of the fair forms which terminate so well—
- 1988, Edmund White, chapter 4, in The Beautiful Room is Empty, New York: Vintage International, published 1994:
- Once Tex had said to me, very sister-to-sister, “Aren’t we mad, we gay boys, starving ourselves to sylphlike fragility, all so we can attract a straight cop with a beer belly?”
- 2001 December 2, “Emily Eakin, The Way We Live Now: 12-02-01: Phenomenon; Tiny Dancers”, in The New York Times:
- Here we see a few of the 48 diminutive hopefuls who showed up that day, awaiting their turn to impress the judges with a high instep or a particularly sylphlike extension.