Norwegian Bokmål

edit

Etymology

edit

From German illusorisch, from Medieval Latin illusorius.

Adjective

edit

illusorisk (indefinite singular illusorisk, definite singular and plural illusoriske)

  1. illusory
edit

References

edit

Norwegian Nynorsk

edit

Etymology

edit

From German illusorisch, from Medieval Latin illusorius.

Adjective

edit

illusorisk (indefinite singular illusorisk, definite singular and plural illusoriske)

  1. illusory
edit

References

edit

Swedish

edit

Adjective

edit

illusorisk (not comparable)

  1. illusory
  2. creating the illusion of being the actual thing (of a depiction or the like); remarkably lifelike, highly evocative of the real thing, etc.

Declension

edit
Inflection of illusorisk
Indefinite Positive Comparative Superlative2
Common singular illusorisk
Neuter singular illusoriskt
Plural illusoriska
Masculine plural3 illusoriske
Definite Positive Comparative Superlative
Masculine singular1 illusoriske
All illusoriska
1) Only used, optionally, to refer to things whose natural gender is masculine.
2) The indefinite superlative forms are only used in the predicative.
3) Dated or archaic
edit

See also

edit

References

edit