geist
See also: Geist
English
Noun
geist (plural geists)
- Ghost, apparition.
- 1877, The spiritual magazine:
- The geists eat and drink, but only as geists — not as spirits. ' We have dined,' they say ' sumptuously.' A vapour- ... If dead men tell no tales, their geists will tell them, if they find opportunity.
- 1996, Stephen Barker, Excavations and Their Objects:
- [...] it makes no difference whether these figures were real, corporeal beings or not, since each one, in terms of Freud's (auto) aesthetic, is a spirit, a geist, a complex function of Freud's worldview.
- 1877, The spiritual magazine:
- Spirit (of a group, age, era, etc).
- 1974, V. Jagannatha Panicker, Crucifixion of the Unborn: Underpopulated India, Digitized edition, Sivaji Publications, published 2008, page 54:
- The population that today explodes on a stagnant society with a catastrophic echo, is the geist of the times that shock our great nation into a new sense of her grandeur.
- 1976, Colorado lawyer - Volume 5 (Law), Colorado Bar Association, page 1640:
- However, the geist of the times following the World War was the "normalcy" of Warren G. Harding.
- 1995, Donald Pizer, The Cambridge Companion to American Realism and Naturalism:
- [...] a term badly applied, as the method is neither a historicism (the belief that each era or period has a geist, principle of identity, or a definable sense of destiny) nor new.
Related terms
References
- OED, geist
Estonian
Old High German
Alternative forms
- gheist, keist
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *gaist, from Proto-Germanic *gaistaz.
Declension
Derived terms
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