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superman

American  
[soo-per-man] / ˈsu pərˌmæn /

noun

plural

supermen
  1. a person of extraordinary or superhuman powers.

  2. an ideal superior being conceived by Nietzsche who attains happiness, dominance, and creativity.

  3. a superior being conceived as the product of human evolution.

  4. one who prevails by virtue of being a ruthless egoist of superior strength, cunning, and force of will.


superman British  
/ ˈsuːpəˌmæn /

noun

  1. (in the philosophy of Nietzsche) an ideal man who through integrity and creativity would rise above good and evil and who represents the goal of human evolution

  2. any man of apparently superhuman powers

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Superman 1 Cultural  
  1. A seemingly immortal, superhuman comic-strip character created in the late 1930s, who hides his powers beneath the persona of Clark Kent, a mild-mannered newspaper reporter. Only when there is a threat of danger — often to his fellow reporter and secret love, Lois Lane — does Clark transform himself into the caped hero with x-ray vision.


Superman 2 Cultural  
  1. An ideal of humanity found in Thus Spake Zarathustra, by Friedrich Nietzsche. The Superman, or Overman (the German is Übermensch), is the single goal of all human striving, for which people must be willing to sacrifice all. It is doubtful that Nietzsche thought of the Overman as an individual person.


Gender

See -man.

Discover More

Superman has been adapted for various radio and television series and a number of highly successful films.

Etymology

Origin of superman

1900–05; super- + man, translation of German Übermensch

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

"Viewers were so used to the Stallone/Schwarzenegger/Chuck Norris-type superman characters that the sight of a hero muttering to himself and even tearing up was startling," Seitz observed.

From Salon • Jul. 18, 2023

At the center of this universe sits Papageno, a colorful, intractably disorderly oddball in muddied outdoor gear, an everyman turned unlikely superman who, in spurning the cultural mores that would shackle him, rises above them.

From New York Times • May 21, 2023

Pallotta, 50, who signs his work Maupal, shot to fame 10 years ago when he painted the pope as a flying superman on a wall in Rome's Borgo neighbourhood across the street from the Vatican.

From Reuters • Mar. 13, 2023

If he can, then he really is superman, because side strains are horrible injuries for fast bowlers to endure.

From BBC • Jan. 9, 2022

He said Harold thats Prof Nemurs frist name I know Charlie is not what you had in mind as the frist of your new breed of intelek** coudnt get the word *** superman.

From "Flowers for Algernon" by Daniel Keyes