Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The creative imagination; unrestrained fancy.
- noun Something, such as an invention, that is a creation of the fancy.
- noun A capricious or fantastic idea; a conceit.
- noun A genre of fiction or other artistic work characterized by fanciful or supernatural elements.
- noun A work of this genre.
- noun An imagined event or sequence of mental images, such as a daydream, usually fulfilling a wish or psychological need.
- noun An unrealistic or improbable supposition.
- noun A coin issued especially by a questionable authority and not intended for use as currency.
- noun Obsolete A hallucination.
- adjective Relating to or being a game in which participants act as owners of imaginary sports teams whose personnel consists of actual players selected from a professional sports league and team performance is determined by the combined statistics of the players.
- transitive verb To imagine; visualize.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Same as
fancy . - noun Irregular or erratic fancy in thought or action; unrestrained imagination; whim; caprice; vagary.
- noun The forming of unreal, chimerical, or grotesque images in the mind; a mingling of incongruous or unfounded ideas or notions; disordered or distorted fancy; fantastic imagination.
- noun A product or result of the power of fantasy; a fantastic image or thought; a disordered or distorted fancy; a phantasm.
- noun In music, same as
fantasia . - To fancy; have a liking for.
- To form or conceive fancifully or fantastically; form a mental picture of; imagine.
- In music, to compose or perform in the manner of a fantasia.
- In music, to play fantasias.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun Fancy; imagination; especially, a whimsical or fanciful conception; a vagary of the imagination; whim; caprice; humor.
- noun Fantastic designs.
- transitive verb obsolete To have a fancy for; to be pleased with; to like; to fancy.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun That which comes from one's
imagination - noun literature The literary genre generally dealing with themes of
magic andfictive medieval technology. - noun slang The drug
gamma-hydroxybutyric acid . - verb literary To
fantasize (about) - verb obsolete To have a
fancy for; to be pleased with; tolike .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun fiction with a large amount of imagination in it
- noun imagination unrestricted by reality
- noun something many people believe that is false
- verb indulge in fantasies
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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The desire for authenticity * is* a Modernist element, so saying it's not found in fantasy, that fantasy is a Romantic form is simply to narrow the definition of "fantasy" to include Romantic works and techniques but exclude Modernist techniqes.
More Aesthetics Hal Duncan 2007
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The desire for authenticity * is* a Modernist element, so saying it's not found in fantasy, that fantasy is a Romantic form is simply to narrow the definition of "fantasy" to include Romantic works and techniques but exclude Modernist techniqes.
Archive 2007-03-01 Hal Duncan 2007
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There have also been suggestions, if not recently, that the boom in fantasy is partly due to the negativity and lack of “soaring imagination” of current science fiction.
F&SF, Reviewing, and Optimism « L.E. Modesitt, Jr. – The Official Website 2009
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Given the male-centric history of sex in fantasy, is it good or bad if my male character is into bondage?
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There have also been suggestions, if not recently, that the boom in fantasy is partly due to the negativity and lack of “soaring imagination” of current science fiction.
June « 2009 « L.E. Modesitt, Jr. – The Official Website 2009
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CHERITH (at left): I think the Harry Potter books have created a greater interest in fantasy literature in the present day, but I think the need for fantasy is something very deeply rooted in the human mind, not just for children.
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Now, when you use the term fantasy, is this something you were doing for your personal pleasure?
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Now, when you use the term fantasy, is this something you were doing for your personal pleasure?
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Now that could be a result of my comparative lack of reading in fantasy, which is why I'm still open to reading more.
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The "Shit Blows Up" fun of Jack's rampaging could even be quite validly deemed escapist; it's just that I try to subvert the consolation subtly within the episodes or through their relationships with the rest of the text, to seduce the reader into engaging with reality even when the fantasy is at its most sensationalist.
Essay Rant Thingy Hal Duncan 2009
writer723 commented on the word fantasy
fantasy:
–noun
The creative imagination; unrestrained fancy. An imagined event or sequence of mental images,such as a daydream, usually fulfilling a wish or psychological need.
April 17, 2011
Louises commented on the word fantasy
The raw fact of my aloneness kept dissolving into the fantasy of him waking up. From "The Last Werewolf" by Glen Duncan.
April 1, 2012