different between intangible vs ghostly

intangible

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle French intangible, from Medieval Latin intangibilis, from Late Latin tangibilis, from Latin tango.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?n?tand??bl/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?n?tænd??b?l/

Adjective

intangible (comparative more intangible, superlative most intangible)

  1. Incapable of being perceived by the senses; incorporeal.

Antonyms

  • tangible

Translations

Noun

intangible (plural intangibles)

  1. Anything intangible
  2. (law) Incorporeal property that is saleable though not material, such as bank deposits, stocks, bonds, and promissory notes

Translations


Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from Medieval Latin intangibilis, from Late Latin tangibilis, from Latin tango.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /intan?xible/, [?n?.t?ã??xi.??le]

Adjective

intangible (plural intangibles)

  1. intangible

Related terms

  • tangible

intangible From the web:

  • what intangible assets are not amortized
  • what intangible assets are amortized
  • what intangible means
  • what intangible assets have indefinite lives
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  • what intangible assets can be capitalized
  • what type of intangible assets are amortized


ghostly

English

Etymology

From Middle English gostly, gastlich, from Old English g?stl?? (spiritual, holy, clerical (not lay), ghastly, ghostly, spectral), equivalent to ghost +? -ly. Cognate with Scots gostly, gastly, gaistlie (spiritual, ghastly, terrifying), West Frisian geastlik (spiritual, clerical, religious), Dutch geestelijk (spiritual, clerical, ecclesiastical), German geistlich (spiritual, sacred, religious), Danish geistlig (ecclesiastical, clerical).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /??o?stli/

Adjective

ghostly (comparative ghostlier, superlative ghostliest)

  1. Of or pertaining to ghosts or spirits.
  2. Spooky; frightening.
    • 1929, Robert Dean Frisbee, The Book of Puka-Puka (republished by Eland, 2019; p. 35):
      Scores of coconut-shell fires blazed with their characteristic glaring white flame, throwing grotesque shadows on the brown thatched huts, dancing in fairylike shimmerings among the domes of coconut fronds, casting ghostly reaches of light through the adjacent graveyards, and silhouetting the forms of pareu-clad natives at work cleaning their fish or laying them on the live coals to broil.
    • 2019, Dave Eggers, The Parade, Vintage Books N.Y., p. 134
      His lips were chapped and lined with a ghostly purple fringe.
  3. Relating to the soul; not carnal or secular; spiritual.
    a ghostly confessor
    • Save and defend us from our ghostly enemies.
    • 1650, Jeremy Taylor, The Rule and Exercises of Holy Living
      one of the ghostly children of St. Jerome

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:ghostly

Translations

See also

  • ghastly

ghostly From the web:

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  • ghostly what does it mean
  • what is ghostly about a dead rattlesnake math answer
  • what is ghostly about a dead rattlesnake math
  • what does ghostly galleon mean
  • what a ghostly scene taylor swift
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