English
Etymology
From Latin mȳthicos + -al;[1] by surface analysis, myth + -ical.
Pronunciation
- enPR: mĭth'ĭkəl, IPA(key): /ˈmɪθɪkəl/
Adjective
mythical (comparative more mythical, superlative most mythical)
- Existing in myth.
- (by extension) Not real; false or fabricated.
- Very rare.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
existing in myth
- Armenian: դիցաբանական (hy) (dicʻabanakan), առասպելական (hy) (aṙaspelakan)
- Belarusian: міфі́чны (mifíčny), міты́чны (mitýčny) (Taraškievica)
- Bulgarian: мити́чески (mitíčeski)
- Catalan: mític (ca)
- Czech: bájný (cs), mytický
- Dutch: mythisch (nl)
- Esperanto: mita
- Finnish: myyttinen (fi)
- French: mythique (fr)
- Galician: mítico m, mítica f
- Georgian: მითიური (mitiuri)
- German: mythisch (de)
- Greek: μυθικός (el) m (mythikós)
- Ancient Greek: μυθικός (muthikós)
- Italian: mitico (it), leggendario (it), favoloso (it)
- Japanese: 神話の (ja) (しんわの, shinwa no)
- Korean: 신화적 (sinhwajeok)
- Latin: fabularis (la), mythicus
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: mytisk
- Nynorsk: mytisk
- Polish: mityczny (pl)
- Portuguese: mítico (pt)
- Russian: мифи́ческий (ru) (mifíčeskij)
- Serbo-Croatian: mȋtskī (sh)
- Slovene: mitski, mitološki (sl)
- Spanish: mítico (es)
- Swedish: mytisk (sv)
- Ukrainian: міфі́чний (mifíčnyj), міти́чний (mitýčnyj)
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See also
References