👻

ghost

An user
He
👨
  has   done   so much   ghostwriting   that   he
👨
  starts   to   feel like   a
🅰️
  ghost
👻
too .

Έχει κάνει τόσα πολλά ghostwriting που αρχίζει να αισθάνεται σαν ένα φάντασμα, επίσης.

(Αγγλικός)

Συχνότητα

B1
Προφέρεται ως (IPA)
/ɡəʊst/
Ετυμολογία (Αγγλικός)

In summary

The noun is derived from Middle English gost, from Old English gāst, gǣst (“breath, spirit, soul, ghost”) (compare modern English Holy Ghost), from Proto-West Germanic *gaist, from Proto-Germanic *gaistaz, from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰéysdos, from *ǵʰéysd- (“anger, agitation”). The h in the spelling appears in the Prologue to William Caxton’s Royal Book, printed in 1484, in a reference to the “Holy Ghoost”. It was likely influenced by Middle Dutch gheest, a common variant of geest. Both Caxton and his assistant Wynkyn de Worde had connections to the Low Countries. Doublet of geist. The adjective and verb are derived from the noun. The verb gained prominence in the 2010s. cognates * Danish gast (“ghost”), gejst (“enthusiasm”) * Dutch geest (“ghost, spirit”) * German Geist (“ghost, spirit”) * Luxembourgish Geescht (“ghost, spirit, spectre, phantom”) * Saterland Frisian Gäist, Jeest (“ghost, spirit”) * Scots gaist, ghaist (“ghost”) * Swedish gast (“ghost”) * Vilamovian gȧjst (“ghost, spirit”) * West Frisian geast (“ghost, spirit”) * Yiddish גײַסט (gayst, “ghost, spirit”) * Yola gaast (“ghost”)

Related words

φάντασμα

πνεύμα

ψυχή

στοιχειό

στοιχείο

φασματικό είδωλο

σκιά

φάσμα

’pnefma

’fadasma

vri’kolakas

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