dreamer

See also: DREAMer and Dreamer

English

Etymology

From Middle English dremer, dremere, dremare, equivalent to dream +‎ -er. Cognate with West Frisian dreamer (dreamer), Saterland Frisian Dröömer (dreamer), Dutch dromer (dreamer), German Träumer (dreamer), Danish drømmer (dreamer), Swedish drömmare (dreamer).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /ˈdɹimɚ/, [d͡ʒɹimɚ]
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈdɹiːmə/
  • Audio (Southern England):(file)
  • Rhymes: -iːmə(ɹ)

Noun

dreamer (plural dreamers)

  1. One who dreams.
  2. Someone whose beliefs are far from realistic.
    • 1971, John Lennon, “Imagine”:
      You may say I'm a dreamer/ But I'm not the only one/ I hope someday you'll join us/ And the world will live as one.
    • 2015, Jennifer Crusie, Leah Wilson, Totally Charmed: Demons, Whitelighters And the Power of Three, →ISBN:
      Eighties witches were not the patchouli-dipped, lovebead-wearing, back-to-the-earth dreamers of the seventies.
  3. Any anglerfish of the family Oneirodidae.
  4. A swallow-winged puffbird (Chelidoptera tenebrosa)

Derived terms

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