gutterflies
"to have illusions," 1650s, from Latin
alucinatus (later
hallucinatus), past participle of
alucinari "wander (in the mind), dream; talk unreasonably, ramble in thought," probably from Greek
alyein, Attic
halyein
"wander in mind, be at a loss, be beside oneself (with grief, joy,
perplexity), be distraught," also "wander about," which probably is
related to
alaomai "wander about" [Barnhart, Klein]. The Latin ending probably was influenced by
vaticinari
"to prophecy," also "to rave." Older in English in a rare and now
obsolete transitive sense "deceive" (c. 1600); occasionally used 19c. in
transitive sense "to cause hallucination." Related:
Hallucinated;
hallucinating.
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