fantasy
English
Etymology
From Old French fantasie (“fantasy”), from Latin phantasia (“imagination”), from Ancient Greek φαντασία (phantasía, “apparition”). Doublet of fancy.
Pronunciation
Noun
fantasy (countable and uncountable, plural fantasies)
- That which comes from one's imagination.
- c. 1599–1602, William Shakespeare, Hamlet, London, Act 1, Scene 1:
- Is not this something more than fantasy?
- 1634, John Milton, Comus:
- A thousand fantasies / Begin to throng into my memory.
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- (literature) The literary genre generally dealing with themes of magic and the supernatural, imaginary worlds and creatures, etc.
- A fantastical design.
- 1850, Nathaniel Hawthorne, chapter 7, in The Scarlet Letter:
- Embroidered with fantasies and flourishes of gold thread.
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- (slang) The drug gamma-hydroxybutyric acid.
Derived terms
- fantasy football
- fantasy baseball
- fantasy wrestling
- fantasy cricket
- high fantasy
- low fantasy
Related terms
Translations
imagining
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literary genre
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Verb
fantasy (third-person singular simple present fantasies, present participle fantasying, simple past and past participle fantasied)
- (literary, psychoanalysis) To fantasize (about).
- 2013, Mark J. Blechner, Hope and Mortality: Psychodynamic Approaches to AIDS and HIV:
- Perhaps I would be able to help him recapture the well-being and emotional closeness he fantasied his brother had experienced with his parents prior to his birth.
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- (obsolete) To have a fancy for; to be pleased with; to like.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Cavendish to this entry?)
- 1518, Thomas More; Robynson, transl., Utopia, published 1551:
- Which he doth most fantasy.
Czech
French
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