different between ghost vs slasher
ghost
English
Alternative forms
- ghoast, gost (both obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English gost, gast, from Old English g?st (“breath, soul, spirit, ghost, being”), from Proto-West Germanic *gaist, from Proto-Germanic *gaistaz (“ghost, spirit”), from Proto-Indo-European *??éysd-os, from *??éysd- (“anger, agitation”). Cognate with Scots ghaist (“ghost”), Saterland Frisian Gäist (“spirit”), West Frisian geast (“spirit”), Dutch geest (“spirit, mind, ghost”), German Geist (“spirit, mind, intellect”), Swedish gast (“ghost”), Sanskrit ??? (hé?a, “anger, hatred”), Persian ???? (zešt, “ugly, hateful, disgusting”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /???st/
- (US) IPA(key): /?o?st/
- Rhymes: -??st
Noun
ghost (countable and uncountable, plural ghosts)
- (dated) The spirit; the soul of man.
- The disembodied soul; the soul or spirit of a deceased person; a spirit appearing after death
- 1667, John Dryden, Annus Mirabilis
- The mighty ghosts of our great Harries rose.
- 1667, John Dryden, Annus Mirabilis
- Any faint shadowy semblance; an unsubstantial image
- A false image formed in a telescope, camera, or other optical device by reflection from the surfaces of one or more lenses.
- An unwanted image similar to and overlapping or adjacent to the main one on a television screen, caused by the transmitted image being received both directly and via reflection.
- 2007, Albert Abramson, The History of Television, 1942 to 2000 (page 60)
- There was less flicker, jitter was nonexistent, and the screen pattern had been rendered far more viewworthy, with ghosts being virtually suppressed.
- 2007, Albert Abramson, The History of Television, 1942 to 2000 (page 60)
- A ghostwriter.
- (Internet) An unresponsive user on IRC, resulting from the user's client disconnecting without notifying the server.
- (computing) An image of a file or hard disk.
- (theater) An understudy.
- (espionage) A covert (and deniable) agent.
- The faint image that remains after an attempt to remove graffiti.
- (video games) An opponent in a racing game that follows a previously recorded route, allowing players to compete against previous best times.
- A dead person whose identity is stolen by another. See ghosting.
- (attributive, in names of species) White or pale.
- (attributive, in names of species) Transparent or translucent.
- (attributive) Abandoned.
- (attributive) Remnant; the remains of a(n).
- (attributive) Perceived or listed but not real.
- (attributive) Of cryptid, supernatural or extraterrestrial nature.
- (attributive) Substitute.
- (uncountable) A game in which players take turns to add a letter to a possible word, trying not to complete a word.
Synonyms
- (soul): essence, soul, spirit
- (spirit appearing after death): apparition, bogey, haint, phantom, revenant, specter/spectre, spook, wraith.
- (faint shadowy semblance): glimmer, glimmering, glimpse, hint, inkling, phantom, spark, suggestion.
- (false image in an optical device):
- (false image on a television screen): echo
- (ghostwriter): ghostwriter
- (unresponsive user):
- (image of file): backup
- (understudy): understudy
- (covert agent): spook, spy
- (image from removed graffiti): shadow
- (opponent in racing game):
- (victim of stolen identity):
- See also Thesaurus:ghost
Derived terms
Descendants
- ? Japanese: ???? (g?suto)
Translations
See also
Verb
ghost (third-person singular simple present ghosts, present participle ghosting, simple past and past participle ghosted)
- (obsolete, transitive) To haunt; to appear to in the form of an apparition.
- 1606, William Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra, Act II, sc. 6, l. 1221
- since Julius Caesar, / Who at Philippi the good Brutus ghosted
- 1606, William Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra, Act II, sc. 6, l. 1221
- (obsolete) To die; to expire.
- (transitive, intransitive) To ghostwrite.
- 1975, Saul Bellow, Humboldt's Gift [Avon ed., 1976, p. 41]:
- Well, you wrote a few books, you wrote a famous play, and even that was half ghosted.
- 1975, Saul Bellow, Humboldt's Gift [Avon ed., 1976, p. 41]:
- (nautical) To sail seemingly without wind.
- (computing) To copy a file or hard drive image.
- (graphical user interface) To gray out (a visual item) to indicate that it is unavailable.
- 1991, Amiga User Interface Style Guide (page 76)
- 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.
- 1991, Amiga User Interface Style Guide (page 76)
- (Internet, transitive) To forcibly disconnect an IRC user who is using one's reserved nickname.
- 2001, "Luke", to leave (vb.): Hurg [OT] (on newsgroup alt.games.lucas-arts.monkey-island)
- 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.
- 2001, "Luke", to leave (vb.): Hurg [OT] (on newsgroup alt.games.lucas-arts.monkey-island)
- (intransitive) To appear or move without warning, quickly and quietly; to slip.
- (transitive) To transfer (a prisoner) to another prison without the prior knowledge of other inmates.
- 2020, Jamie Bennett, ?Victoria Knight, Prisoners on Prison Films (page 26)
- His power base, however, is undermined by him being constantly, “ghosted”, or moved from prison to prison.
- 2020, Jamie Bennett, ?Victoria Knight, Prisoners on Prison Films (page 26)
- (slang) To kill.
- (slang) To break up with someone without warning or explanation; to perform an act of ghosting.
- (transitive, slang) To ignore (a person).
- (film) To provide the speaking or singing voice for another actor, who is lip-syncing.
- 1955, Saturday Review (volume 38, part 2, page 27)
- 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 was ghosting the voices for both of them.
- 1999, The Golden Age of Musicals (page 50)
- 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 production its only underpinning of realism.
- 1955, Saturday Review (volume 38, part 2, page 27)
Derived terms
- beghost
Anagrams
- Goths, gosht, goths
ghost From the web:
- what ghosting says about you
- what ghost visited scrooge
- what ghost visited scrooge first
- what ghost crawls in phasmophobia
- what ghosting means
- what ghosts are in a christmas carol
- what ghostbur remembers
slasher
English
Etymology
slash +? -er
Noun
slasher (plural slashers)
- One who slashes.
- A machine for applying size to warp yarns.
- (informal, film) A horror movie with graphic blood and violence. A slasher movie
- One who self-injures by cutting.
- A tool for cutting undergrowth.
- (fandom slang) One who writes slash fiction and/or supports male/male ships.
- 2002, Christopher Noxon, "What to do about Harry Potter Porn?", The Vancouver Sun, 21 December 2002, page 96:
- With the success of the first film and the third one already in production, Warner Bros. is more likely to greet Harry Potter slashers with more takedown orders than tolerance.
- 2006, Francesca Coppa, "Writing Bodies in Space: Media Fan Fiction as Theatrical Performance", in Fan Fiction and Fan Communities in the Age of the Internet: New Essays (ed. Kristina Busse), page 49:
- The same aspects that made buddy shows attractive to relationship-oriented fans also made them attractive to slashers; the fact that these shows were set in an era of tight jeans and unbuttoned shirts, and of the loosening of formerly strict standards of acceptable male behavior, only provided additional evidence for homoerotic interpretation.
- 2014, Kathryn Hill, "'Easy to Associate Angsty Lyrics with Buffy': An Introduction to a Participatory Fan Culture: Buffy the Vampire Slayer Vidders, Popular Music and the Internet", in Buffy and Angel Conquer the Internet: Essays on Online Fandom (ed. Mary Kirby-Diaz), page 182:
- In other words denied their own voice by a conservative misogynist culture, the original female slashers and vidders needed male characters as surrogates to express their own identity and desires.
- 2002, Christopher Noxon, "What to do about Harry Potter Porn?", The Vancouver Sun, 21 December 2002, page 96:
Derived terms
- slasher movie
- femslasher
Coordinate terms
- (slash fiction): shipper
Translations
Anagrams
- Haslers, Hassler, Lashers, ashlers, halsers, hassler, lashers
Spanish
Alternative forms
- cine slasher
Etymology
English slasher
Noun
slasher m (plural slashers)
- slasher (horror subgenre)
Hypernyms
- cine de terror
slasher From the web:
- what slasher has the most kills
- what slasher character are you
- what slasher are you
- what slasher means
- what slasher movie killer are you
- what slasher movies are on netflix
- what slasher villain are you
- what slasher would you be
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