If you see your own double, you're in trouble, at least if you believe old superstitions. The belief that a ghostly twin's appearance portends death is one common to many cultures. In German folklore, such an apparition is called a Doppelgänger (literally, "double goer"); in Scottish lore, they are wraiths. The exact origin of the word wraith is misty, however, and etymologists can only trace it back to the early 16th century—in particular to a 1513 translation of Virgil'sAeneid by Gavin Douglas (the Scotsman used wraith to name apparitions of both the dead and the living). In current English, wraith has taken on additional, less spooky, meanings; it now often suggests a shadowy—but not necessarily scary—lack of substance.
the people who once lived here believed that their world was populated by wraiths and witches
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to
show current usage.Read More
Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors.
Send us feedback.
Many slide hopelessly back into lives as nearly invisible wraiths, measured in the intervals between fixes — and arrests.—Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board, Orlando Sentinel, 16 Dec. 2024 Discovery, two of the bigger owners of these cable-network wraiths, haven’t had much to show for keeping them up and running.—Brian Steinberg, Variety, 31 Oct. 2024 Human puppets swayed over a Pont like wraiths of those who had been staked there.
🎾
Follow Sports
Dashing through it all was the torchbearer, his identity unknown.—Sally Jenkins, Washington Post, 27 July 2024 And the second revealed the full menagerie of creatures that will appear in Season 2, including wraiths, wolves, ents and a giant cave troll.—Jordan Moreau, Variety, 26 July 2024 See all Example Sentences for wraith
Share