See also: ringwraith

English edit

Etymology edit

ring +‎ wraith, coined by J. R. R. Tolkien as a fantasy character in The Lord of the Rings.

Noun edit

Ringwraith (plural Ringwraiths)

  1. (fantasy) Anyone who keeps a magical ring, and is enslaved thereby, and may also be rendered invisible and immortal thereby.
    • 2006, J.C. Sillesen, No Return[1], page 40:
      A party of four at one of my stations included a pretty creditable Scarlett O'Hara in her famous green velvet `curtains' gown, a fairy princess complete with fancy airbrushed wings, a man dressed as either a Ringwraith or the Grim Reaper (I guessed from the absence of a sickle that he was probably a Ringwraith), and George Washington.
    • 2007, Mark Stephen Smith, The Art of Flash Animation: Creative Cartooning, page x:
      I had written a number of short stories in the Twilight Zone and Alfred Hitchcock Presents vein, and a couple of fantasy novels that explored the premise of modernized 'Ringwraiths' invading a 1986 Alabama high school."
    • 2007. Jerry Dowlen, "Lio Lios", 2007, p27
      Like the Ringwraiths,
      I need your acacia unfurled,
      Enabling my dream-stuns
      Of fizzing mauve whirls.

Synonyms edit