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- Dictionaryspectre/ˈspɛktə/
noun
- 1. a ghost: "a dread of spectres and witches affected every aspect of daily life" Similar
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the idea of something unpleasant that might happen in the future: The awful spectre of civil war looms over the country. Drought and war have raised the spectre of food shortages for up to 24 million African people. [ C ] literary. a ghost. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Predicting things and intuition. augury. bellwether. betcha.
The meaning of SPECTER is a visible disembodied spirit : ghost. How to use specter in a sentence.
spectre in British English. or US specter (ˈspɛktə ) noun. 1. a ghost; phantom; apparition. 2. a mental image of something unpleasant or menacing. the spectre of redundancy. Collins English Dictionary.
The word spectre (or specter) has to do with being haunted — it can be something that literally haunts you, like the ghost of your Aunt Sally who bangs the windows every night. You can also say that a reminder of something painful is a spectre.
Spectre definition: a ghost; phantom; apparition. See examples of SPECTRE used in a sentence.
SPECTER definition: 1. US spelling of spectre 2. the idea of something unpleasant that might happen in the future: 3…. Learn more.
n. 1. a visible incorporeal spirit, esp. one of a terrifying nature; ghost; phantom; apparition. 2. some object or source of terror or dread: the specter of disease. Also, esp. Brit., spectre. [1595–1605; < Latin spectrum; see spectrum]