phantom: [13] Like fancy and fantasy, phantom goes back ultimately to the Greek verb phantázein ‘make visible’, a derivative of phaínein ‘show’ (source also of English diaphanous and phenomenon [17]). From phantázein was derived the noun phántasma ‘apparition, spectre’, which passed into Latin as phantasma. This reached English in two separate forms: as phantom, via Old French fantosme; and as phantasm [13], via Old French fantasme. The latter formed the basis of the fanciful coinage (originally French) phantasmagoria [19]. Other related English words are emphasis and pant. => diaphanous, emphasis, pant, phase, phenomenon
phantom (n.)
c. 1300, fantum "illusion, unreality," from Old French fantosme (12c.), from Vulgar Latin *fantauma, from Latin phantasma "an apparition" (see phantasm). The ph- was restored in English late 16c. (see ph). Meaning "specter, spirit, ghost" is attested from late 14c.; that of "something having the form, but not the substance, of a real thing" is from 1707. As an adjective from early 15c.
雙語例句
1. The phantom of the merry-go-round is just a local superstition.
旋轉木馬的幽靈隻不過是當地的迷信說法。
來自柯林斯例句
2. The phantom used to appear unexpectedly, but mostly during the winter.
那個幽靈過去常常出人意料地出現,但是大多在冬季。
來自柯林斯例句
3. the phantom of his dead father
他已故父親的幽靈
來自《權威詞典》
4. I found myself staring at her as if she were a phantom.
我發現自己瞪大眼睛看著她,好像她是一個幽靈.
來自《簡明英漢詞典》
5. She was entering the masses with the phantom of a future Utopia.