A figment is something formed from imaginary elements. Daydreams are figments; nightmares are figments that can seem very real. Most figments are everyday fears and hopes about small things that turn out to be imaginary. But when the radio play "The War of the Worlds" aired in 1938, it caused a panic among thousands of people who didn't realize the Martian invasion was just a figment of the author's imagination.
unable to find any tracks in the snow the next morning, I was forced to conclude that the shadowy figure had been a figment of my imagination
thus far, the invisible human being has been nothing more than a figment of fantasy writers
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So this character is a figment of some cis man's imagination.—Marley Gotterer, Them., 18 Sep. 2025 Are the protagonist’s past lives real, or just figments of his psychosis?—Literary Hub, 25 Aug. 2025 But the hunger crisis isn’t a figment of some propagandist’s imagination.—Peter Jensen, Baltimore Sun, 7 Aug. 2025 Audiences have been debating whether the Mirren, Johnny, and Gat seen in Summer 17 are actual ghosts or just figments of Cadence's imagination.—Allison Degrushe Published, EW.com, 19 June 2025 See All Example Sentences for figment
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, "fable, deceitful practice," borrowed from Latin figmentum "thing formed, image, invention," from fig-, variant stem of fingere "to mold, fashion, make a likeness of, pretend to be" + -mentum-ment — more at feign
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