| 例句 | illusionnoun a conception or image created by the imagination and having no objective realitythe magician specializes in creating illusions, so that people believe they have seen something when they really haven't chimera, conceit, daydream, delusion, dream, fancy, fantasy(also phantasy), figment, hallucination, nonentity, phantasm(also fantasm), pipe dream, unreality, vision ignis fatuus, mirage, will-o'-the-wispbrainchild, ideaconcoction, fable, fabrication, fiction, inventionenvisaging, imaging, visualizationcloud-cuckoo-land, cloudland, Shangri-la, utopiadaymare, nightmare castle in Spain, castle in the air actuality, fact, realitya false idea or beliefhe had no illusions about how much effort and money the renovation project would require delusion, error, fallacy, falsehood, falsity, hallucination, misbelief, misconception, myth, old wives' tale, untruth factoidsuperstitionfiction, pretense(or pretence)distortion, inaccuracy, misapprehension, miscomprehension, misinterpretation, misjudgment, misperception, misunderstandingmisinformation, misknowledge, misreport, misrepresentation, misstatementsophism, sophistryfib, half-truth, lie, story, tale truth, veritydelusion, illusion, hallucination, mirage mean something that is believed to be true or real but that is actually false or unreal.delusion implies an inability to distinguish between what is real and what only seems to be real, often as the result of a disordered state of mind.delusions of persecutionillusion implies a false ascribing of reality based on what one sees or imagines. an illusion of safetyhallucination implies impressions that are the product of disordered senses, as because of mental illness or drugs. suffered from terrifying hallucinationsmirage in its extended sense applies to an illusory vision, dream, hope, or aim. claimed a balanced budget is a mirage in the 14th century |