Phantom
41Phantom — fantomas statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. phantom vok. Phantom, m rus. фантом, m pranc. fantôme, m …
42phantom — fantomas statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. phantom vok. Phantom, m rus. фантом, m pranc. fantôme, m …
43phantom — [13] Like fancy and fantasy, phantom goes back ultimately to the Greek verb phantázein ‘make visible’, a derivative of phaínein ‘show’ (source also of English diaphanous and phenomenon [17]). From phantázein was derived the noun phántasma… …
44phantom — adj. Phantom is used with these nouns: ↑limb, ↑pain …
45Phantom — Phan·to̲m [f ] das; s, e; etwas, das es nur in jemandes ↑Fantasie (1) gibt ≈ Trugbild <einem Phantom nachjagen> …
46phantom — noun a ghost. ↘a figment of the imagination. ↘[as modifier] not real; illusory: a phantom conspiracy. Origin ME: from OFr. fantosme, based on Gk phantasma (see phantasm) …
47phantom — noun 1) a phantom who haunts lonely roads Syn: ghost, apparition, spirit, specter, wraith; informal spook; literary phantasm, shade 2) the phantoms of an overactive imagination Syn: delusion, figment of the imagination, hallucination …
48phantom — n 1. incubus, succubus, evil spirit, nightmare, bad dream, Sl. bad trip; chimera, figment, figment of the imagination, trick of the imagination, phantom of the mind, illusion, delusion. See also phantasm(def. 2). 2. apparition, specter, shade,… …
49Phantom pain — sensations are described as perceptions that an individual experiences relating to a limb or an organ that is not physically part of the body. Limb loss is a result of either removal by amputation or congenital limb deficiency (Glummarra et al,… …
50Phantom power — (labeled as +48 V on some audio equipment) is a method that sends a DC electrical voltage through microphone cables. It is best known as a common power source for condenser microphones, though many active DI boxes also use it. Phantom power… …