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Delusion vs Hallucinate - What's the difference?

delusion | hallucinate |

As a noun delusion

is a false belief that is resistant to confrontation with actual facts.

As a verb hallucinate is

(transitive|and|intransitive) to seem to perceive things (with one or more of one's senses) which are not really present; to have visions; to experience a hallucination.

delusion

Noun

(en noun)
  • A false belief that is resistant to confrontation with actual facts.
  • The state of being deluded or misled.
  • That which is falsely or delusively believed or propagated; false belief; error in belief.
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=1960 , author=William L. Shirer , title=The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany , page=835 , publisher=Simon & Schuster , location=New York , isbn=0-671-72869-5 , id=LCCN 81101072 , passage=Hess, always a muddled man though not so doltish as Rosenberg, flew on his own to Britain under the delusion that he could arrange a peace settlement.}} (Webster 1913)

    Derived terms

    * delusion of grandeur

    Anagrams

    * unsoiled

    hallucinate

    English

    Verb

  • (transitive, and, intransitive) To seem to perceive things (with one or more of one's senses) which are not really present; to have visions; to experience a hallucination.
  • Synonyms

    * (seem to perceive what is not present) imagine, see things

    Derived terms

    * hallucination * hallucinative * hallucinatory

    References

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