ghost word
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Coined by Walter William Skeat in 1886; ghost + word.
Noun
ghost word (plural ghost words)
- (linguistics) A fictitious or erroneous word, originally meaningless (not used in practice), that has been published in a dictionary or similarly authoritative reference work or otherwise listed as genuine, generally as the result of misinterpretation, misreading, or typographical error.
- 2006, Folia orientalia - Volumes 42-43, page 467:
- Here such cases as ghost words & misglosses, secondary semantics, different etymologies for one etymon or one etymology for different etyma, and finally semantic overpermissiveness are discussed.
- 2014, James Lambert, “A Much Tortured Expression: A New Look At 'Hobson-Jobson'”, in International Journal of Lexicography, volume 27, number 1, page 65:
- Anglo-Indian English was recognised in colonial days as having unique features, but it was never called Hobson-Jobson at that time. Therefore, this is really a ghost word, or, rather, a ghost meaning.
Translations
fictitious or erroneous word
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See also
- nihilartikel
- sniglet
- 幽霊文字 (ゆうれいもじ, yuurei moji), a similar phenomenon featuring Japanese kanji
- Appendix:English dictionary-only terms
- Category:Ghost words by language
Further reading
- ghost word on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- dord on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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