English edit

Noun edit

niephling (plural niephlings)

  1. Alternative form of niefling
    • 2013 December 8, Françoise Harvey, “Hanky PANKy”, in Bookworms and Coffee Monsters:
      Excitingly, by the time we arrive for Christmas, the newest niephling, who's due in about a week courtesy of my other sister, will also be there.
    • 2014 October 3, Barbarella Fokos, “Children, children everywhere”, in San Diego Reader[1], archived from the original on 5 October 2014:
      Oh, and one important difference with the zoo’s kid freebies is that the cutoff is 11 years old. So no tweens here, please. On the upside, parents can now inform their eager 12-year-olds that they are “too grown up” to be considered kids. I know a few of my niephlings would dig that.
    • 2021, A.J. Lancaster, The Lord of Faerie, Camberion Press, →ISBN:
      "I am," she said reluctantly. Did she look pregnant, somehow, already? It was probably just some magical fae thing, but it made her self-conscious anyway. Two people in one day figuring out her secret didn't bode well. "Congratulations on your future uncle-ship."
      Rakken blinked. "Indeed." He blinked again. "A half-human niephling."
    • 2022, C. S. E. Cooney, Saint Death's Daughter, Rebellion Publishing, →ISBN:
      Eparch Aranha, who seemed to Lanie no less piercingly watchful than Tan, was nevertheless easier to steer clear of, for they only occasionally attended Rainday culture nights with their niephling Lir, and that was for the sole purpose—so they proclaimed—of enjoying the sublime music of the erophains.