fantasy basketball








noun, plural fan·ta·sies.

  1. imagination, especially when extravagant and unrestrained.
  2. the forming of mental images, especially wondrous or strange fancies; imaginative conceptualizing.
  3. a mental image, especially when unreal or fantastic; vision: a nightmare fantasy.
  4. Psychology. an imagined or conjured up sequence fulfilling a psychological need; daydream.
  5. a hallucination.
  6. a supposition based on no solid foundation; visionary idea; illusion: dreams of Utopias and similar fantasies.
  7. caprice; whim.
  8. an ingenious or fanciful thought, design, or invention.
  9. Also fantasia. Literature. an imaginative or fanciful work, especially one dealing with supernatural or unnatural events or characters: The stories of Poe are fantasies of horror.
  10. Music. fantasia(def 1).

adjective

  1. noting or relating to any of various games or leagues in which fans assemble players of a professional sport into imaginary teams, and points are scored based on the performance of these players in real games: fantasy football; fantasy sports.

verb (used with or without object), fan·ta·sied, fan·ta·sy·ing.

  1. to form mental images; imagine; fantasize.
  2. Rare. to write or play fantasias.

noun plural -sies

    1. imagination unrestricted by reality
    2. (as modifier)a fantasy world
  1. a creation of the imagination, esp a weird or bizarre one
  2. psychol
    1. a series of pleasing mental images, usually serving to fulfil a need not gratified in reality
    2. the activity of forming such images
  3. a whimsical or far-fetched notion
  4. an illusion, hallucination, or phantom
  5. a highly elaborate imaginative design or creation
  6. music another word for fantasia, fancy (def. 13), (rarely) development (def. 5)
    1. literature having a large fantasy content
    2. a prose or dramatic composition of this type
  7. (modifier) of or relating to a competition, often in a newspaper, in which a participant selects players for an imaginary ideal team, and points are awarded according to the actual performances of the chosen playersfantasy football

verb -sies, -sying or -sied

  1. a less common word for fantasize
n.

early 14c., “illusory appearance,” from Old French fantaisie (14c.) “vision, imagination,” from Latin phantasia, from Greek phantasia “appearance, image, perception, imagination,” from phantazesthai “picture to oneself,” from phantos “visible,” from phainesthai “appear,” in late Greek “to imagine, have visions,” related to phaos, phos “light,” phainein “to show, to bring to light” (see phantasm). Sense of “whimsical notion, illusion” is pre-1400, followed by that of “imagination,” which is first attested 1530s. Sense of “day-dream based on desires” is from 1926.

n.

  1. Imagery that is more or less coherent, as in dreams and daydreams, yet unrestricted by reality.phantasia
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