refantasize
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]refantasize (third-person singular simple present refantasizes, present participle refantasizing, simple past and past participle refantasized)
- (transitive) To fantasize again or anew.
- 1986, Emilie Richards, Something So Right, →ISBN, page 231:
- "I'll have to refantasize where you got all this expertise," she said. "I had you pegged as the Romeo of some plush, private school."
- 2015, Julia Marshall, David M. Donahue, Art-Centered Learning Across the Curriculum, →ISBN, page 94:
- Each photograph shows how modern-day Americans remember, memorialize, reinterpret, refantasize, and relive great historical events and idolize larger-than-life figures of American history.
- 2015, Ian Almond, The Thought of Nirad C. Chaudhuri: Islam, Empire and Loss, →ISBN, page 127:
- More than in any visible, explicit sense, the loss of these various places forced Chaudhuri to refabricate them, refantasize them, in their absence.