phantasmagoria

noun

phan·​tas·​ma·​go·​ria (ˌ)fan-ˌtaz-mə-ˈgȯr-ē-ə How to pronounce phantasmagoria (audio)
1
: an exhibition of optical effects and illusions
2
a
: a constantly shifting complex succession of things seen or imagined
b
: a scene that constantly changes
3
: a bizarre or fantastic combination, collection, or assemblage
phantasmagoric adjective
or phantasmagorical

Examples of phantasmagoria in a Sentence

He saw a phantasmagoria of shadowy creatures through the fog.
Recent Examples on the Web
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The opportunity to complete his unfinished manuscript initially makes the film seem like a tribute to deadline extensions, but Youth Without Youth twists itself into a metaphysical phantasmagoria on age, consciousness, spirituality, and 20th-century evil. Scott Tobias, Vulture, 27 Sep. 2024 Lurking behind Foreman’s madhouse phantasmagorias is the mind of the artist interrogating its own secret chambers. Charles McNulty, Los Angeles Times, 21 Oct. 2024 In Miranda's imagining, the song becomes a theater-history phantasmagoria, with an endless parade of Broadway stars appearing as extras. Scott Hocker, theweek, 1 May 2024 Its members might be entering their 80s, but the group's rebellious spirit and rock & roll phantasmagoria is as potent as ever. Ew Staff, EW.com, 25 Sep. 2023 See all Example Sentences for phantasmagoria 

Word History

Etymology

borrowed from French phantasmogorie (later fantasmagorie) "theatrical show using magic lanterns in a darkened performance space to suggest supernatural phenomena," from fantasme phantasm + -ogorie, -agorie, of uncertain origin

Note: The French word was used by the magician Paul Phylidor (†1829, of uncertain nationality), apparently first in an announcement of a performance in the Parisian journal Affiches, annonces et avis divers for December 16, 1792. The performance is discussed slightly earlier under the heading "Phantasmogorie" in a letter by one "A.L.M.," in an issue of the Magasin encyclopédique for December 3, 1792 (pp. 17-19). The final element -agorie has been variously explained; perhaps the most plausible suggestion is that it was split off from allégorie allegory. In a handbill for a performance in Vienna in March, 1790, Phylidor uses the presumably plural form phantasmorasi: "… wird der Physikus Phylidor seine Darstellungen der sogenannten Phantasmorasi, oder natürlicher Geister Erscheinungen … einem hohen und unschätzbaren Publikum die Ehre haben zu zeigen" ("… the physician Phylidor will have the honor to exhibit his representations of the so-called Phantasmorasi, or natural spirit phenomena, to a high and inestimable public"). The relation of this earlier word to phantasmogorie is unclear. (The handbill is preserved in the Vienna City Library.)

First Known Use

circa 1802, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of phantasmagoria was circa 1802

Dictionary Entries Near phantasmagoria

Cite this Entry

“Phantasmagoria.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/phantasmagoria. Accessed 30 Nov. 2024.

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