fantôme
Norman
noun
Definitions
- (Jersey) ghost
Etymology
Inherited from Old French fantosme derived from Latin phantasma (specter, apparition, an apparition, LL) derived from Ancient Greek φάντασμα (ghost, image, phantom, apparition, an appearance, specter, phantasm).
Origin
Ancient Greek
φάντασμα
Gloss
ghost, image, phantom, apparition, an appearance, specter, phantasm
Concept
Semantic Field
Religion and belief
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
👻
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- phantasmagorial English
- phantasmagorian English
- phantasmagoric English
- phantasma Latin
- fantasma Italian
- fantasmagorie French
- fantasme French
- fantôme French
- phantasmagorie French
- fantasma Spanish, Castilian
- φάντασμα Ancient Greek
- φᾰντᾰ́ζω Ancient Greek
- *bʰeh- Proto-Indo-European
- fantasma Portuguese
- fantom Middle English
- fantom, fantum Middle English
- fantasme Old French
- fantosme Old French
- fantasma Catalan, Valencian
- pantasma Galician
- φάντασμα Greek (modern)
- fantâxima Ligurian