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Imaginary
Answer for the clue "Imaginary ", 7 letters:
fancied
Alternative clues for the word fancied
Word definitions for fancied in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"imaginary, formed by the fancy," 1560s, past participle adjective from fancy (v.).
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
v. imagine; conceive of; see in one's mind; "I can't see him on horseback!"; "I can see what will happen"; "I can see a risk in this strategy" [syn: visualize , visualise , envision , project , see , figure , picture , image ] have a fancy or particular ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Fancied \Fan"cied\, a. [From Fancy , v. t.] Formed or conceived by the fancy; unreal; as, a fancied wrong.
Usage examples of fancied.
Better still, he thought sternly, if Acton fancied himself in love with her.
After we had supped with the actress, Patu fancied a night devoted to a more agreeable occupation, and as I did not want to leave him I asked for a sofa on which I could sleep quietly during the night.
Dyne, his scrawny arms strapped to a pair of Y-shaped branches, eyes girlishly aflutter, feigned to yield his hairless body into the ecstatic admixture of bliss and pain of which he fancied heaven was justly composed.
The Dowager, with a magnificent disregard for the coachman and the footman, perched on the box-seat in front of her, knew no such reticence, and discoursed with great freedom on the birth of an heir to the barony, animadverting with embarrassing candour, and all the contempt of a matriarch who had brought half-a-dozen children into the world without fuss or complications, on sickly young women who fancied themselves to be ill days before their time, and ended by suffering cross births and hard labours.
It stared above his head at one of its fellows on the opposite side of the square apse, but Yama fancied that he saw its eyes flicker toward him for an instant.
But my thoughts were different when my vanity was stronger than love, for then despair avenged itself on pride, and I fancied he would think no more of me, and perhaps had already forgotten me.
Now and then, however, it got some baddish cases, people who were almost off their rocker, and I fancied that Brumby was one.
Amid this vast stretch of stars, with seemingly endless planets an which lived not a soul to call him Joe, he could have really enjoyed the arrival from far away or an irate human voice bawling him out good and proper for some error, real or fancied.
His wife having given him permission, Admiral Beagle fancied himself a strong man, and he sometimes passed for one outside her company.
In the meantime no one not even Lord Bute must guess of this thing which was there in her throat and which she fancied became a little more painful every time she was made aware of it.
She had the feeling that Chria fancied herself as a kind of latter-day Valkyrie.
I enjoyed nine hours of deep sleep, unbroken by any dreams, save that I always fancied myself sitting at a well-spread table, and gratifying my cruel appetite, but every morning I could realize in full the vanity and the unpleasant disappointment of flattering dreams!
The senator fancied that he could trace upon the physiognomy of young people certain signs which marked them out as the special favourites of fortune.
After a few moments of calm, thinking I should take him by surprise, I extended my hand, but I drew back terrified, for I fancied that I had recognized in him a man, and a degraded man, contemptible less on account of his degradation than for the want of feeling I thought I could read on his countenance.
I fancied that I could live free and independent in a country ruled entirely by an aristocratic government, but this was not the case, and would not have been so even if fortune had raised me to a seat in that same government, for the Republic of Venice, considering that its primary duty is to preserve its own integrity, finds itself the slave of its own policy, and is bound to sacrifice everything to self-preservation, before which the laws themselves cease to be inviolable.