English edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈdɹim.t͡ʃɪld.ɹən/

Noun edit

dreamchildren

  1. plural of dreamchild
    • 1858, Charles Dickens, Speech in the Freemasons’ Hall in London following the proposal of a toast to “Prosperity to the Hospital for Sick Children”, closing paragraph:
      The dream-children whom I would now raise, if I could, before every one of you, according to your various circumstances, should be the dear child you love, the dearer child you have lost, the child you might have had, the child you certainly have been. Each of these dream-children should hold in its powerful hand one of the little children now lying in the Child’s Hospital, or now shut out of it to perish. Each of these dream-children should say to you, “O, help this little suppliant in my name; O, help it for my sake!”
    • 1996, Francis Scott Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise, page 79:
      [] met winter muses, unacademic, and cloistered by Forty-second Street and Broadway, instead of the Shelleyan dreamchildren with whom he had regaled their expectant appreciation.
    • 2002, Elisabeth Hallett, Stories of the Unborn Soul: The Mystery and Delight of Pre-birth Communication, page 260:
      Perhaps some of the dreamchildren and vision-children who never show up in this reality are members of other families that we love and belong to, elsewhere.
    • 2004: Amy Christine Billone, The Boy Who Lived: From Carroll’s Alice and Barrie’s Peter Pan to Rowling’s Harry Potter, pUnknown (pp178–202)
      Dreamchildren are not only imaginary child characters who dream; they also tend to be fantasized about by the authors of the stories in which they appear.
    • 2005, James Huneker, Painted Veils, page 240:
      She loved children, and in default of them she delighted in the poetic fiction of dreamchildren.