specter
English
WOTD – 26 October 2015
Alternative forms
- spectre (Commonwealth English)
Etymology
From Middle French spectre, from Latin spectrum (“appearance, apparition”). Doublet of spectrum.
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈspɛktɚ/, enPR: spĕkʹtər
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈspɛktə/, enPR: spĕkʹtə
Audio (US): (file) Audio (General Australian): (file) - Rhymes: -ɛktə(ɹ)
Noun
specter (plural specters) (American spelling)
- A ghostly apparition, a phantom. [from 17th c.]
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:ghost
- A specter haunted the cemetery at the old Vasquez manor.
- 1605, Peter de Loier [i.e., Pierre Le Loyer], translated by [Zachary Jones], “The many things being meerely Naturall are taken by the Sight or Hearing being deceived, for Specters and things prodigious”, in A Treatise of Specters or Straunge Sights, Visions and Apparitions Appearing Sensibly vnto Men. […], London: […] Val[entine] S[immes] for Mathew Lownes, →OCLC, folio 62, verso:
- Nevertheleſſe, they which ſhould ſee thoſe Iſles thus to moove in this manner, not knowing before that the ſame were naturall: they would entertaine many and diverſe apprehenſions in their fantaſie, & would imagine that they ſawe a thing very ſtrange and prodigious, and ſuch as did very neere approach to the nature of ſome Specter [translating spectre] and viſion.
- (figuratively) A threatening mental image; an unpleasant prospect [from 18th c.]
- 1848, Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, translated by Samuel Moore, The Communist Manifesto:
- A specter is haunting Europe — the specter of communism. All the powers of old Europe have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise this specter: Pope and Tsar, Metternich and Guizot, French Radicals and German police-spies.
- 2024 August 14, “Thai court removes PM Srettha Thavisin from office over cabinet appointment”, in france24.com[2]:
- Thailand's Constitutional Court on Wednesday dismissed Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin for appointing to his cabinet a former lawyer who served jail time, raising the spectre of more political upheaval and a reset of the governing alliance.
- 2025 February 25, Linda Feldmann, “How Trump skirts checks and balances unlike any modern-day US president”, in The Christian Science Monitor:
- Instead of three co-equal branches acting as a check on each other, power has become increasingly concentrated over the years in the White House – a trend that is now being supercharged under Mr. Trump in ways that, to critics, raise the specter of authoritarianism.
- (entomology) Any of certain species of dragonfly of the genus Boyeria, family Aeshnidae. [from 20th c.]
Derived terms
- Brocken specter
- Macleay's spectre
- mountain specter
- raise the specter
- specter at the feast
- specter bat
- specter candle
- specter shrimp
- spectral
Translations
ghostly apparition
|
mental image
Anagrams
Latin
Verb
specter
- first-person singular present passive subjunctive of spectō