fantasma-1
ghost ; spectre [specter, -USA] ; wraith ; spook ; phantasm ; phantom.
Some authors, of course, object to their work being subjected to compulsory dissection for exams in the traditional deadly manner and like Bernard Shaw, they swear to haunt anyone who so mistreats them (Shaw's ghost must be busy these days).
The automated catalogue became a spectre of looming change because the same electronic advances that made the online catalogue a reality promised even greater transformations = The automated catalogue became a spectre of looming change because the same electronic advances that made the online catalogue a reality promised even greater transformations.
The article is entitled 'Wraiths, revenants and ritual in medieval culture'.
The article 'Ghosts, spooks and spectres' looks briefly at some of the ways in which public librarians have been portrayed in popular fiction.
Fourniret is a dangerous man obnubilated by the phantasm of virginity.
The phantoms of the book's name are those sensed by amputees who have vividfeeling, even pain, in limbs they know are gone.
cazar fantasmas
chase + phantoms
Fighting isms is like chasing a phantom: What is it? Who is it? Where is it? Why is it?.
historia de fantasmas
ghost story
Most people love a good ghost story, especially one that takes place in a haunted house.
perseguir fantasmas
chase + phantoms
grasp at + shadows
Fighting isms is like chasing a phantom: What is it? Who is it? Where is it? Why is it?.
As is typical of Nigeria the real issue is misconstrued and completely neglected, we again continue to scrape the surface and grasp at shadows.
pueblo fantasma
ghost town
Sections cover farms and ranches, towns, schools and churches, fisheries and canneries, railroads, mines and ghost towns, and graveyards.
ver un fantasma [Expresión de haberse quedado impresionado o impactado por algo]
see + a ghost
'When you walked in here, Tony, you looked as if you'd just seen a ghost' = "Tony, cuando entrastes aquí parecía como si hubieras visto un fantasma".