poltergeist

英 ['pɒltəgaɪst] 美 ['poltɚ'gaɪst]
  • n. 敲击作响闹恶作剧的鬼
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poltergeist 促狭鬼

来自德语Poltergeist,吵闹鬼,发出噪音的鬼,来自poltern,发出噪音,沙沙作响,拟声词,Geist,鬼,词源同ghost,zeitgeist.

poltergeist
poltergeist: [19] A poltergeist is literally a ‘noisy ghost’. The word was borrowed from German in the 19th century, where it is a compound made up of poltern ‘make a noise, rattle or rumble’ and geist ‘spirit, ghost’ (a relative of English ghost).
poltergeist (n.)
1838, from German Poltergeist, literally "noisy ghost," from poltern "make noise, rattle" (from PIE root *bhel- (4) "to sound, ring, roar;" source of bellow, bell) + Geist "ghost" (see ghost). In the native idiom of Northern England, such phenomenon likely would be credited to a boggart.