fantom

English

Adjective

fantom (not comparable)

  1. Archaic form of phantom.

Noun

fantom (plural fantoms)

  1. Archaic form of phantom.

Ladin

Noun

fantom

  1. ghost

Middle English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Old French fantosme, from Latin phantasma, from Ancient Greek φάντασμα (phántasma).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fanˈtɔːm/, /ˈfantɔm/, /ˈfantum/, /ˈfantəm/, /fanˈtɛːm/

Noun

fantom (plural fantoms)

  1. Something that is ephemeral or transient; worldly wealth (as opposed to spiritual gains).
  2. An experience or happening that is non-real or phantasmic; something which is misleading or a phantom.
  3. A lie or misconception; something which is untrue or divorced from reality.
  4. (rare) Deceitfulness or fraudulence; the practice or art of conniving to trick.
  5. (rare, medicine) A hallucination or state of deliriousness brought on by illness.

Descendants

References


Norwegian Bokmål

Noun

fantom n (definite singular fantomet, indefinite plural fantom or fantomer, definite plural fantoma or fantomene)

  1. phantom

See also


Norwegian Nynorsk

Noun

fantom n (definite singular fantomet, indefinite plural fantom, definite plural fantoma)

  1. a phantom

Romansch

Etymology

Borrowed from German Phantom.

Noun

fantom m (plural fantoms)

  1. phantom

Serbo-Croatian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fǎntoːm/
  • Hyphenation: fan‧tom

Noun

fàntōm m (Cyrillic spelling фа̀нто̄м)

  1. phantom

Declension


Swedish

Alternative forms

Noun

fantom c

  1. phantom

Declension

Declension of fantom 
Singular Plural
Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite
Nominative fantom fantomen fantomer fantomerna
Genitive fantoms fantomens fantomers fantomernas
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