Dictionary Definition
ghostly adj : like or being a phantom; "a ghostly
face at the window"; "a phantasmal presence in the room"; "spectral
emanations"; "spiritual tappings at a seance" [syn: apparitional, ghostlike, phantasmal, spectral, spiritual] [also: ghostliest, ghostlier]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
- Of or pertaining to ghosts or spirituality.
- Spooky; frightening.
Translations
- French: fantomatique
- Spanish: fantasmal
Extensive Definition
A ghost is said to be the apparition
of a dead person. They are usually seen to be similar in appearance
to that person, and are often encountered in places he or she
frequented, or in association with the person's former belongings.
The word "ghost" may also refer to the spirit or soul of a deceased person, or any
spirit or demon. Ghosts
are often associated with hauntings, which is, according to the
Parapsychological Association, "the more or less regular
occurrence of paranormal
phenomena associated with a particular locality (especially a
building) and usually attributed to the activities of a discarnate
entity; the phenomena may include apparitions,
poltergeist
disturbances, cold drafts, sounds of footsteps and voices, and
various odors." The term ghost has been replaced by apparition
in parapsychology, because
the word ghost is deemed insufficiently precise.
Historical background
The belief in ghosts as souls of the departed is closely
related to the ancient concept of animism, which attributed souls
to everything in nature, including human beings, animals, plants, rocks,
etc. As the nineteenth-century anthropologist James Frazer
explained in his classic work, The Golden
Bough, souls were seen as the creature within that animated the
body:
"If a man lives and moves, it can only be because
he has a little man or animal inside, who moves him. The animal
inside the animal, the man inside the man, is the soul. And as the
activity of an animal or man is explained by the presence of the
soul, so the repose of sleep or death is explained by its absence;
sleep or trance being the temporary, death being the permanent
absence of the soul... "
Although the human soul was sometimes
symbolically or literally depicted in ancient cultures as a bird or
other animal, it was widely held that the soul was an exact
reproduction of the body in every feature, even down to clothing
the person wore. This is depicted in artwork from various ancient
cultures, including such works as the
Egyptian Book of the Dead, which shows deceased people in the
afterlife appearing much as they did before death, including the
style of dress.
Another widespread belief concerning ghosts is
that they were composed of a misty, airy, or subtle material.
Anthropologists
speculate that this may also stem from early beliefs that ghosts
were the person within the person, most noticeable in ancient
cultures as a person's breath, which upon exhaling in colder
climates appears visibly as a white mist. This belief may have also
fostered the metaphorical meaning of "breath" in certain languages,
such as the Latin spiritus and the Greek
pneuma, which by analogy became extended to mean
the soul. In the Bible, God is depicted as
animating Adam with a
breath.
Ghosts are prominent in the popular cultures of
various nations. The ghost story
is ubiquitous across all cultures from oral folktales to works of
literature.
Perhaps the most recognizable ghost in English
literature is the shade of Hamlet's
father in the play The Tragical History of
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. In Hamlet, it is the ghost that
encourages the title
character to investigate his "murder most foul" and seek
revenge upon King
Claudius, the suspected murderer of Hamlet's father.
Possibly the next most famous apparitions are the
ghosts of A
Christmas Carol, where the ghost of Jacob
Marley,
The Ghost of Christmas Past,
The Ghost of Christmas Present and
The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come help Ebenezer
Scrooge see the error of his ways.
Oscar Wilde's
The
Canterville Ghost has been adapted for film and television on
several occasions. Henry James's The
Turn of the Screw has also appeared in a number of adaptations,
notably the film The
Innocents and Benjamin
Britten's opera
The Turn of the Screw. Noel Coward's
play Blithe
Spirit, later made into a film,
places a more humorous slant on the phenomenon of haunting of
individuals and specific locations.
Films including or centering on ghosts are
common, and span a variety of genres. Ghosts can also be found in
various television programs.
The ghost
hunting theme has also become prevalent in reality
television series particularly Ghost
Hunters and
Ghost Hunters International, but also Most
Haunted, and A Haunting. It
is also represented in children's television by such programmes as
The Ghost
Hunter.
The Grateful
Dead adopted their name and iconography from a series of
traditional ghost stories known as Grateful
Dead (folktale).
Books
- The Face in the Window and Other Alabama Ghostlore, Alan Brown, University of Alabama Press (1997), ISBN 978-0817308131
- The Vermont Ghost Guide, Joseph A. Citro, University Press of New England (2000), ISBN 978-1584650096
See also
- Books on haunted locations
- Electronic voice phenomenon
- Ghost hunting
- Ghost Hunters
- Ghostbusters
- Haunted house
- Hoax
- Holy Spirit
- List of haunted locations
- List of U.S. paranormal guides
- Most Haunted
- Parapsychology
- Raynham Hall
- Stambovsky v. Ackley
- Stigmatized property
- The Atlantic Paranormal Society
- The Bell Witch
- The Canterville Ghost
- William H. Mumler
- Yūrei
- Apparition
- Doppelgaenger
- Gjenganger
- Haunter
- Phantasm (Fantasm)
- Phantom (Fantom)
- Poltergeist
- Soul
- Spiritus
- Spook
- Wraith
ghostly in Afrikaans: Spook
ghostly in Arabic: شبح
ghostly in Bengali: ভুত
ghostly in Bulgarian: Дух (призрак)
ghostly in Catalan: Fantasma
ghostly in Czech: Duch
ghostly in Danish: Spøgelse
ghostly in German: Gespenst
ghostly in Modern Greek (1453-): Φάντασμα
ghostly in Spanish: Fantasma
ghostly in Esperanto: Fantomo
ghostly in French: Fantôme
ghostly in Indonesian: Hantu
ghostly in Italian: Fantasma
ghostly in Hebrew: רוח רפאים
ghostly in Latin: Larva
ghostly in Lithuanian: Vaiduoklis
ghostly in Hungarian: Kísértet
ghostly in Malay (macrolanguage): Hantu
ghostly in Dutch: Spook
ghostly in Dutch Low Saxon: Spoek
ghostly in Japanese: 亡霊
ghostly in Norwegian: Spøkelse
ghostly in Occitan (post 1500): Fantauma
ghostly in Polish: Duch (spirytyzm)
ghostly in Portuguese: Fantasma
ghostly in Russian: Привидения
ghostly in Simple English: Ghost
ghostly in Slovak: Duch (prízrak)
ghostly in Slovenian: Duh
ghostly in Finnish: Kummitus
ghostly in Swedish: Spöke
ghostly in Tatar: Öräk
ghostly in Thai: ผี
ghostly in Vietnamese: Ma
ghostly in Cherokee: ᎠᏂᏣᏍᎩᎵ
ghostly in Chinese: 鬼
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
airy,
asomatous, astral, blue, bodiless, cadaverous, corpselike, creepy, deadly, deathlike, deathly, deathly pale, decarnate, decarnated, discarnate, disembodied, ectoplasmic, eerie, ethereal, etheric, extramundane, ghastly, ghostish, ghostlike, ghosty, grisly, gruesome, haggard, immaterial, impalpable, imponderable, incorporate, incorporeal, insubstantial, intangible, livid, lurid, macabre, mortuary, nonmaterial, nonphysical, occult, otherworldly, pale, phantasmal, phantasmic, phantom, phantomic, phantomlike, preternatural, psychic, scary, shadowy, sinister, specterlike, spectral, spiritual, spooky, strange, supernatural, transmundane, uncanny, unearthly, unembodied, unextended, unfleshly, unnatural, unphysical, unreal, unsubstantial, unworldly, wan, weird, wraithlike, wraithy