wereghost

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From were- +‎ ghost.

Noun[edit]

wereghost (plural wereghosts)

  1. (fiction, rare) A shapeshifter who can assume the form of a ghost.
    • 2012, J.D. Melville, Herstory. The Second Released Norma Shearer Novel, Xlibris, →ISBN, section 64:
      Hey, A long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, (...) long, long after the final, final, final, final, final, final, final, final, final, and final subsubchronon's superending, there were no more blood, bone, bonemarrow, organisms, cells, brains, skulls, or any sign of life or organisms, so a wereghost beat the last werewhore to the last droplet of blood's Sabbathless, Sabbathlike smithers.
    • 2012, Lauren Bjorkman, Miss Fortune Cookie, page 147:
      "After he hauls you off to the station and leaves me alone in this forsaken neighborhood, some wereghost will come along and tear me to bits."
    • 2015, Andy Goldman, The Fifth House. The Only City Left. Book two:
      I had thought our last meeting had gone well, or as well as it could have with me strapped to a table about to be killed by my homicidal were-ghost uncle.