/ɡəʊst/, /ɡoʊst/, /ɡɐʉst/
- countable, uncountableA disembodied soul; a soul or spirit of a deceased person; a spirit appearing after death.
“Everyone believed that the ghost of an old lady haunted the crypt.”
“He believes in ghosts.”
“The mighty ghosts of our great Harries rose.”
- archaic, countable, literary, uncountableA spirit; a human soul.
“hen gins her grieued ghost thus to lament and mourne.”
“Enlightening the eyes and a taste for hope, emotions are felt from an inward ghost.”
“If I thought that “I” referred to my inner ghost, I wouldn't be worried because a bullet can't hurt a ghost, and equally there would be no point in your shooting.”
- broadly, countable, uncountableAny faint shadowy semblance; an unsubstantial image.
“not a ghost of a chance”
“the ghost of an idea”
“And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor.”
- countable, uncountableA false image, for example in a photographic print or negative, or on a television screen or radar display, or in a telescope, caused by poor or double reception or reflection (from a lens or screen).
“There was less flicker, jitter was nonexistent, and the screen pattern had been rendered far more viewworthy, with ghosts being virtually suppressed.”
- countable, uncountableA faint image that remains after an attempt to remove graffiti.
“Regardless of GRM used, graffiti ghosts persist. Protect cladding with surface coating or replace with graffiti resistant paint or laminate.”
- abbreviation, alt-of, countable, ellipsis, uncountableEllipsis of ghostwriter.
“I’ve written both as a ghost for experts and under my name.”
- countable, uncountableA nonexistent person invented to obtain some (typically fraudulent) benefit.
“Some health systems are plagued by "ghost" and "absent" workers. Ghost workers are nonexistent, listed in the payroll, and paid, a clear sign of corruption.”
“1,500 secondary schools in Jiangxi found 125 cases of illegally collected Ghosts and Absentees fees worth $2 million.”
“Before filling out this form, please visit the Pennsic Pre-Registration Page to create your account and enter your campers and ghosts [nonexistent campers one pays for to legitimately increase the siz”
- countable, uncountableA dead person whose identity is stolen by another (see ghosting).
- Internet, countable, uncountableAn unresponsive user on IRC, resulting from the user's client disconnecting without notifying the server.
“This will let you open a query with NickServ again so you can remove your “ghost” from the server: […]”
- countable, uncountableA copy of a file or record.
- countable, uncountableAn understudy.
- countable, uncountableA covert (and deniable) agent.
- countable, uncountableAn opponent in a racing game that follows a previously recorded route, allowing players to compete against previous best times.
“This is also the case for some racing games (Super Mario Kart is a good example) that allow you to compete against your ghosts, which are precise recordings of your performance.”
- countable, uncountableSomeone whose identity cannot be established because there are no records of such a person.
“"[…]no record of a Robert, or Bobby, Maclain that fits our man's description," Kuzbec said. "No social, no driver's license, no address, no military service record. He's a ghost." Kirov did find that ”
“"He's a ghost. No record of any kind, anywhere. I got nothing when I did a trace. I'm thinking he was either erased or he's something we don't know about." Nyk rubbed at his jaw. "If he was erased, Sy”
- countable, uncountableAn unphysical state in a gauge theory.
“The proof is well known, and independent of the metric, but to make certain we prove it here also for the case when the state vector system of an operator contains multipole^([sic]) ghosts.”
“Soon after, the proof of the No-Ghost Theorem, establishing that the DRM has no ghosts if d ≤ 26, was achieved independently by Brower (1972) and by Goddard and Thorn (1972).”
- attributive, countable, uncountableA formerly nonexistent character that was at some point mistakenly encoded into a character set standard, which might have since become used opportunistically for some genuine purpose.
“彁 is a ghost character from the Japanese JIS X 0208 character set.”
- abbreviation, alt-of, countable, ellipsisEllipsis of ghost pepper.
“Spicy or mild, lovely bells or scary ghosts, peppers belong in your garden. Not only are they delicious, they add a gorgeous pop of color to vegetable gardens. When starting pepper seeds, consider usi”
“Fresh chili has a glossy smooth skin like a bell pepper...unless you're in scorching territory, with the likes of Ghosts or Reapers (their name should give the game away), where the skin looks [wrinkl”
- capitalized, often, uncountableA game in which players take turns to add a letter to a possible word, trying not to complete a word.
“GHOST. This is a spelling game. A person gives a letter, […] his next neighbor must think of a word beginning with this letter, and then say the second letter, […]”
“[…]word is, you win the round. But be warned : if she does have a real word in mind, you lose. Bluffing[:] It's possible to bluff in Ghost. For example, you can pretend to add a suffix to a word, even”
“[…]played ghost, which was a popular word game at that time. Ghost was a very convenient game since it required no props, lights, or space. Each player must add a letter to the continuous formation of”
- attributive, countable, uncountableWhite or pale.
“ghost slug”
“ghost flower”
- attributive, countable, uncountableTransparent or translucent.
“ghost ant”
“ghost catfish”
- attributive, countable, uncountableAbandoned.
- attributive, countable, uncountableRemnant; remains.
“ghost apples (a thin layer of ice in the shape of an apple, which forms around it and is left behind when the apple rots and falls out)”
“ghost fossils (impressions of things like shells that remain in the rock after the shell etc dissolves)”
“ghost cell”
- attributive, countable, uncountablePerceived or listed but not real.
“ghost cellphone vibration”
“ghost pain”
“ghost island”
- attributive, countable, uncountableOf a cryptid, supernatural or extraterrestrial nature.
“ghost rocket”
“ghost deer”
- attributive, countable, uncountableSubstitute.
“ghost writer”
“ghost singer”
- not-comparable, slangIn the form be ghost: not present or involved; absent, gone.
“Thug held up a middle finger. "A'ight y'all. I'm ghost."”
“But I don't see no competition in the game and I'm pissing on it
If it ain't about the family, then I'm ghost and that's a promise”
- literary, poetic, transitiveOf a disembodied soul: to appear (somewhere or to someone) in the form of an apparition; to haunt.
“since Julius Caesar, / Who at Philippi the good Brutus ghosted”
- literary, poetic, transitiveTo imbue (something) with a ghost-like effect or hue.
“It spread slowly up from the sea-rim, a welling upwards of pure white light, ghosting the beach with silver and drawing the grey bastions of sandstone out of formless space.”
- broadly, figuratively, transitiveTo continuously cause (someone or something) trouble; specifically, to continuously be in the thoughts of (someone) in a disturbing manner; to perturb, to trouble.
- broadly, figuratively, slang, transitiveTo kill (someone).
“My recommendation: Do me. Don't take the chance that I'll get shiv-happy on your wannabe ass. Ghost me, Riddick. Would if I were you. Though I notice he tried to ghost my ass. When he shot up that str”
“He just ghosted two guys, and I never even saw him. Plan was to clean the bank, ghost the mercs, break wide through the tunnel.”
“This may come as a shock to you, Johns, but I didn't ghost your son. He seemed set on killin' himself. Diaz was gonna take the nodes for himself and ghost me. He was gonna leave you out here alone.”
- broadly, figuratively, transitiveTo gray out (a visual element) to indicate that it is unavailable.
“Whenever a menu or menu item is inappropriate or unavailable for selection, it should be ghosted. Never allow the user to select something that does nothing in response.”
- Internet, broadly, figuratively, transitiveTo forcibly disconnect (an IRC user) who is using one's reserved nickname.
“I'm so untechnical that I once ghosted a registered IRC nick and then tried to identify myself to NickServ with the valid password before actually changing my nick to the aforementioned moniker.”
- broadly, figuratively, slang, transitiveTo stop communicating with (someone) on social media, though text messages, etc., without explanation, especially as a way of ending a relationship; hence, to end a relationship with (someone) by stopping all communication without explanation.
“I've recently been trying out Tinder, and while I match with people and even chat with them everything seems to be going well, but whenever I bring up meeting IRL, they are quick to ghost me.”
“By 6 p.m., I had a list of restaurants to try from Hamish, a chef who couldn't meet, a follow-up from Adam ("I've never seen a room at the Ace...."), and an offer from Agoraphobic Paul to come over an”
“Tinder knows me so well. It knows the real, inglorious version of me who copy-pasted the same joke to match 567, 568, and 569; who exchanged compulsively with 16 different people simultaneously one Ne”
- UK, broadly, figuratively, transitiveTo transfer (a prisoner) to another prison, usually without first informing the prisoner.
“His power base, however, is undermined by him being constantly, “ghosted”, or moved from prison to prison.”
- transitiveSynonym of ghostwrite (“to write (a literary work or speech), or produce (an artistic work)), in the place of someone”); also, to carry out (an artistic performance) in the place of someone.
“Here's how it went: Larry Parks as elderly Al Jolson was watching Larry Parks playing young Al Jolson in the first movie — in other words, Parks ghosting for Parks. At the same time, Jolson himself wa”
“Well, you wrote a few books, you wrote a famous play, and even that was half ghosted.”
“One of the few performers to triumph over ghosting was Ava Gardner in Freed's Show Boat (1951). Not only does she lip-synch with breathtaking accuracy, her performance gives the cotton-candy productio”
- intransitiveTo appear suddenly or move like a disembodied soul; specifically (often sports); also (transitive, dated) followed by the dummy subject it: to move easily and quietly without anyone noticing; to slip.
“Arsenal came into the match under severe pressure and nerves were palpable early on as Pratley was brilliantly denied by Szczesny after ghosting in front of Kieran Gibbs”
“At the flank of the main stage, I took root for an hour, until a female form ghosted in front of me that I recognised from university two years before.”
“He ghosted through the door. It clanged a few seconds later as his pursuer pounded on it.”
- intransitiveFollowed by for: synonym of ghostwrite (“to write a literary work or speech, or produce an artistic work, in the place of someone”); also, to carry out an artistic performance in the place of someone.
- intransitiveOf a sailing vessel: to sail seemingly with very little or no wind.
“They move without any visible sign of movement, like a wakeless ship ghosting over the water.”
- intransitive, obsoleteApparently only in the writings of the Dutch-English physician Gideon Harvey (c. 1636–1640 – c. 1700–1702): to die, to expire.
Formsghosts(plural) · ghoast(alternative) · gost(alternative) · ghosts(present, singular, third-person) · ghosting(participle, present) · ghosted(participle, past) · ghosted(past)