fantast
See also: Fantast
English
Noun
fantast (plural fantasts)
- (now rare) One whose manners or ideas are fantastic and fanciful; a dreamer.
- 1804, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, notes on Thomas Browne's Vulgar Errors:
- He is indeed all this; and what he has more than all this peculiar to himself, I seem to convey to my own mind in some measure by saying, — that he is a quiet and sublime enthusiast with a strong tinge of the fantast, — the humourist constantly mingling with, and flashing across, the philosopher, as the darting colours in shot silk play upon the main dye.
- 1987, Joan Didion, Miami, Granta, published 2005, page 190:
- I recall one particularly heady Outreach meeting, in 1985, at which one of the speakers was a fantast named Jack Wheeler, who liked to say that Izvestia had described him as an “ideological gangster” […] .
Translations
one with fantastic or fanciful ideas
Dutch
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Noun
fantast m or f (plural fantasten, diminutive fantastje n)
Related terms
Descendants
- Negerhollands: fantast
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from German Phantast.
Noun
fantast m (plural fantaști)
Declension
| singular | plural | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | ||
| nominative-accusative | fantast | fantastul | fantaști | fantaștii | |
| genitive-dative | fantast | fantastului | fantaști | fantaștilor | |
| vocative | fantastule | fantaștilor | |||
Swedish
Noun
fantast c
- (often in compounds) an enthusiast, a buff
- en skoterfantast
- a snowmobile enthusiast
- a fantast
Declension
| nominative | genitive | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | indefinite | fantast | fantasts |
| definite | fantasten | fantastens | |
| plural | indefinite | fantaster | fantasters |
| definite | fantasterna | fantasternas |