What the word mystery means

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Middle English mysterie, from Anglo-Norman misterie (Old French mistere), from Latin mysterium, from Ancient Greek μυστήριον (mustḗrion, a mystery, a secret, a secret rite), from μύστης (mústēs, initiated one), from μυέω (muéō, I initiate), from μύω (múō, I shut). Displaced native Old English ġerȳne.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • enPR: mĭsʹtərē, mĭsʹtrē, IPA(key): /ˈmɪstəɹi/, /ˈmɪstɹi/
  • Rhymes: -ɪstəɹi
  • Hyphenation: mys‧te‧ry,
myst‧ery

Noun[edit]

mystery (countable and uncountable, plural mysteries)

  1. Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown.

    The truth behind the events remains a mystery.

    • 1927, F. E. Penny, chapter 4, in Pulling the Strings:

      The case was that of a murder. It had an element of mystery about it, however, which was puzzling the authorities. A turban and loincloth soaked in blood had been found; also a staff.

  2. Someone or something with an obscure or puzzling nature.

    That man is a mystery.

    • 1905, Baroness Emmuska Orczy, chapter 5, in The Hocussing of Cigarette[1]:

      Then I had a good think on the subject of the hocussing of Cigarette, and I was reluctantly bound to admit that once again the man in the corner had found the only possible solution to the mystery.

  3. (obsolete) A secret or mystical meaning.
    • 1567, Matteo Bandello, Certain Tragical Discourses of Bandello, tr. Geffraie Fenton:
      …and, not knowing the meaning or misterie of her pollicie, forgat no termes of reproche or rigorous rebuke against his chast doughter.
  4. A religious truth not understandable by the application of human reason alone (without divine aid).
    • 1744 (first printed), Jonathan Swift, A Sermon on the Trinity
      If God should please to reveal unto us this great mystery of the Trinity, or some other mysteries in our holy religion, we should not be able to understand them, unless he would bestow on us some new faculties of the mind.
  5. (archaic outside Eastern Orthodoxy) A sacrament.
    • 1809, Sir Robert Ker Porter, Travelling Sketches in Russia and Sweden: During the Years 1805, 1806, 1807, 1808:
      There are seven mysteries, or sacraments, in the Greek church, viz. baptism, the chrism (a rite peculiar to this church), the eucharist, confession, ordination, marriage, and the holy oil.
  6. (chiefly in the plural) A secret religious celebration, admission to which was usually through initiation.

    the Mysteries of Mithras

    • 1899 February, Joseph Conrad, “The Heart of Darkness”, in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, volume CLXV, number M, New York, N.Y.: The Leonard Scott Publishing Company, [], →OCLC, part I, page 196:

      There’s no initiation either into such mysteries.

  7. (Catholicism) A particular event or series of events in the life of Christ.

    The second decade of the Rosary concerns the Sorrowful mysteries, such as the crucifixion and the crowning with thorns.

  8. A craft, art or trade; specifically a guild of craftsmen.[1]
    • 1776, Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations
      The trades, the crafts, the mysteries, would all be losers.

Synonyms[edit]

  • roun (obsolete)

Derived terms[edit]

Terms derived from mystery

[edit]

Terms etymologically related to mystery

Translations[edit]

something secret or unexplainable

  • Albanian: mister (sq) m
  • Arabic: سِرّ (ar) m (sirr)
  • Armenian: գաղտնիք (hy) (gałtnikʿ), առեղծված (hy) (aṙełcvac)
  • Assamese: please add this translation if you can
  • Asturian: misteriu m
  • Azerbaijani: sirr (az)
  • Basque: misterio
  • Belarusian: таямні́ца f (tajamníca), зага́дка f (zahádka)
  • Bengali: রহস্য (bn) (rohośśo)
  • Breton: kevrin (br) m
  • Bulgarian: мисте́рия (bg) f (mistérija), та́йна (bg) f (tájna)
  • Burmese: စကားထာ (my) (ca.ka:hta)
  • Catalan: misteri (ca) m
  • Cebuano: tugahala
  • Chinese:
    Cantonese: 神祕神秘 (san4 bei3)
    Mandarin: 神祕神秘 (zh) (shénmì)
    Min Nan: 神祕神秘 (zh-min-nan) (sîn-pì)
    Min Nan: 神奇 (zh-min-nan) (sîn-kî)
  • Czech: záhada (cs) f
  • Danish: mysterium n
  • Dutch: mysterie (nl) n
  • Esperanto: mistero (eo)
  • Estonian: müsteerium
  • Finnish: salaisuus (fi)
  • French: mystère (fr) m
  • Galician: misterio m
  • Georgian: საიდუმლოება (saidumloeba), ხვაშიადი (xvašiadi)
  • German: Geheimnis (de) n, Rätsel (de) n
  • Gothic: 𐍂𐌿𐌽𐌰 f (runa)
  • Greek: μυστήριο (el) n (mystírio)
    Ancient: μυστήριον n (mustḗrion)
  • Hebrew: תַּעֲלוּמָה (he) f (ta’aluma)
  • Hindi: रहस्य (hi) f (rahasya), राज़ m (rāz), राज (hi) m (rāj), मुअम्मा (hi) m (muammā), सेर (hi) m (ser)
  • Hungarian: rejtély (hu)
  • Icelandic: ráðgáta f
  • Indonesian: misteri (id)
  • Italian: mistero (it) m, arcano (it) m, enigma (it) m
  • Japanese: ミステリー (misuterī), 不思議 (ja) (ふしぎ, fushigi), 神秘 (ja) (しんぴ, shinpi)
  • Kalmyk: нууц (nuuts)
  • Kannada: please add this translation if you can
  • Kapampangan: duwala
  • Kazakh: құпия (qūpiä), сыр (kk) (syr)
  • Khmer: អាថ៌កំបាំង (ʼaat kɑmbang)
  • Korean: 신비(神秘) (ko) (sinbi), 미스터리 (miseuteori)
  • Kurdish:
    Northern Kurdish: sir (ku), raz (ku), sirr (ku), surr (ku)
  • Kyrgyz: сыр (ky) (sır)
  • Lao: ຄວາມລຶກລັບ (khuām lưk lap)
  • Latin: mysterium n, obscuritas, occulta, naturae sacra, arcanum n
  • Latvian: noslēpums m, mistērija f
  • Lithuanian: paslaptis m, misterija f
  • Macedonian: та́јна f (tájna), за́гатка f (zágatka), мисте́рија f (mistérija)
  • Malay: misteri
  • Maltese: misteru m
  • Maori: mea ngaro, pirikoko, pirikoko
  • Mongolian:
    Cyrillic: нууц (mn) (nuuc)
    Mongolian: ᠨᠢᠭᠤᠴᠠ (niɣuča)
  • Nepali: रहस्य (rahasya)
  • Norman: mystéthe m
  • Norwegian:
    Bokmål: mysterium n
  • Occitan: mistèri (oc) m
  • Old English: ġerȳne n
  • Oriya: please add this translation if you can
  • Pashto: سر (ps) m (sar), راز (ps) m (rāz), نوز‎ m (nawz), اسرار (ps) m pl (asrãr)
  • Persian: راز (fa) (râz), معما (fa) (mo’ammâ), سر (fa) (serr)
  • Plautdietsch: Jeheemniss n
  • Polish: tajemnica (pl) f, misterium (pl) n
  • Portuguese: mistério (pt) m
  • Punjabi: please add this translation if you can
  • Romanian: mister (ro) n
  • Russian: та́йна (ru) f (tájna), зага́дка (ru) f (zagádka)
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: та̑јна f, за̏гоне̄тка f, мѝсте̄рӣј m
    Roman: tajna (sh) f, zagonetka (sh) f, mìstērīj (sh) m
  • Slovak: záhada f
  • Slovene: skrivnost (sl) n
  • Spanish: misterio (es) m, arcano (es)
  • Swahili: siri (sw), kilinge (sw)
  • Swedish: mysterium (sv) n, mystär (sv) c
  • Tagalog: hiwaga (tl)
  • Tajik: роз (roz), муаммо (tg) (muammo), сир (tg) (sir)
  • Tamil: மர்மம் (ta) (marmam)
  • Telugu: please add this translation if you can
  • Thai: ความลี้ลับ (kwaam-líi-láp)
  • Tibetan: please add this translation if you can
  • Turkish: gizem (tr), esrâr, sır (tr)
  • Turkmen: syr
  • Ukrainian: тає́мниця (uk) f (tajémnycja), зага́дка (uk) f (zahádka)
  • Urdu: راز‎ m (rāz), سر (ur) m (sirr)
  • Uyghur: سىر(sir)
  • Uzbek: sir (uz)
  • Vietnamese: bí ẩn (vi), huyền bí (vi)
  • Volapük: müster (vo), rätöf (vo)
  • Welsh: dirgelwch f
  • Yiddish: מיסטעריע‎ f (misterye)
  • Zulu: zinga

References[edit]

  1. ^ http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ch15.htm#S9

Middle English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

From Anglo-Norman misterie.

Noun[edit]

mystery

  1. Alternative form of mysterie (mystery)

Etymology 2[edit]

From Old French mistere.

Noun[edit]

mystery

  1. Alternative form of mysterie (duty)

Other forms: mysteries

A mystery is something that baffles our understanding and cannot be explained. The giant slabs of Stonehenge, remain a mystery to this day.

The noun mystery comes from the Greek mysterion, meaning «secret rite or doctrine.» A great synonym for secret is enigma. We use this word all the time to describe stuff we don’t understand, from crop circles and UFOs to the origins of the universe and the workings of the human brain. In literature, drama, and film, a mystery is a story that centers around a crime, usually murder, which finally gets solved at the very end.

Definitions of mystery

  1. noun

    something that baffles understanding and cannot be explained

    “how it got out is a
    mystery

    synonyms:

    closed book, enigma, secret

  2. noun

    a story about a crime (usually murder) presented as a novel or play or movie

    synonyms:

    mystery story, whodunit

    see moresee less

    types:

    detective story

    a narrative about someone who investigates crimes and obtains evidence leading to their resolution

    murder mystery

    a narrative about a murder and how the murderer is discovered

    type of:

    story

    a piece of fiction that narrates a chain of related events

DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘mystery’.
Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors.
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«Great is the mystery of godliness,» says Paul; and _mystery_ involves the unknown. ❋ Mary Baker Eddy (1865)

It is the function of the poet to realize and revere the mystery, but it is the duty of philosophy to explore and dissipate it, as far as possible, for _mystery is the foe of human progress_. ❋ Unknown (1856)

Still, a pricing system shrouded in mystery is also ripe for abuse. ❋ Unknown (2010)

Especially since, after the main mystery is resolved, there is all those post-climactic follow-up, which in the end doesnt ‘really go anywhere, and all these plot bits are left mysterious and unresolved at the end. ❋ Desayunoencama (2005)

The Vatican Council has explained the meaning to be attributed to the term mystery in theology. ❋ 1840-1916 (1913)

When we opened the book to the contents page, the title mystery was solved. ❋ Queen, Ellery (1864)

The White House is about to learn that we’re much more inclined to support the candidate who has always been on our side over the candidate who brings new meaning to the term mystery meat. ❋ Unknown (2010)

Mr. Lazaridis doesn’t use the term mystery, but he focuses in the same fashion on solving paradoxes, most particularly for the original breakthrough on how to reduce size for laptops yet create a better and more usable product. ❋ Unknown (2009)

This mystery is a profound one, and I am saying that it refers to Christ and the church … ❋ Unknown (2009)

I’m not sure what the mystery is about the end of Galactica. ❋ Unknown (2008)

I thought the premise was interesting, but to set up a murder mystery and then have no progress made toward trying to solve the mystery is annoying. ❋ Unknown (2008)

It comes from the Greek word mueo, meaning “to initiate,” and is the base of the word musterion, the source of our word mystery. ❋ Carlton Pearson (2010)

Another element of the mystery is the deftness gap. ❋ Unknown (2008)

And one of the few cards that they can play to some effect is what I call the mystery card: Keeping us and others in the dark about their intentions, their system. ❋ Unknown (2010)

“The solution to the mystery is always inferior to the mystery itself” as Borges would have it. ❋ Unknown (2008)

1) Girl 1: How’s your mystery, love? Girl 2: Oh, just [spiffy]. We were [mackin’] yesterday. Girl 1: I’m totally [jellin’]… I wish I had a mystery.
2) Oh, fuck! I just stepped in some mystery! ❋ Brankie (2005)

Dionysos mystery and [demeter] mystery were kept in secret. Who broke [the silence] [oath], had to die. ❋ Ptk (2004)

[omg] [heaton] is [nothing] compared to mystery. ❋ No I Am Not A Mystery Writing This Poofta Sifn’t (2003)

[Mystery] is better than [CARMACK]!![111] ❋ Eekekke (2003)

it’s a mystery that he [didnt] [knock] his mother [the fuck out] ❋ Anonymous (2003)

[OMG] he [such a] mystery ❋ Andrew (2003)

[Dib]: [Mysterious Mysteries] is on!
Gaz: Why do you have a head?
or
Dib: i finally got pictures of [Zim] without his disguise, Im sending them to Mysterious Mysteries and then the whole world will know the truth! ❋ Invader Alice (2008)

-Did you [read that] [poem]? its dark and [cheerful].
-Well you can never know what *Name* thinks about he is Mysterious ❋ SilverHeart (2009)

Today I received [a phone call] from a [manufacturer] offering a new mysterial when I can’t even get a [supply] of the popular materials. ❋ Qfm (2017)

[Outer Space] is a very mysterious [place]. ❋ Zatarain’s Root Beer Drinker (2021)

  • Definition & Examples
  • When & How to Write a Mystery
  • Quiz

I. What is Mystery?

Mystery (pronounced mis-tuh-ree, ) is a genre of literature whose stories focus on a puzzling crime, situation, or circumstance that needs to be solved. The term comes from the Latin mysterium, meaning “a secret thing.” stories can be either fictional or nonfictional, and can focus on both supernatural and non-supernatural topics. Many mystery stories involve what is called a “whodunit” scenario, meaning the mystery revolves around the uncovering a culprit or criminal.

II. Example of Mystery

 Read the following short passage:

 I stared down at the corpse, whose face was covered by a ski mask. Next to the body was a pile of money. The biggest pile of money I had ever seen. Attached to the body was a note. I tore it from the dead man’s jacket, and read it slowly, over and over, trying to take in its words: Get rid of this and the money is yours—I will deliver the other half after the job is done. Sincerely, F.  What I did next was something I would grow to regret for the rest of my life.

The passage above sets up a mysterious situation for the audience to follow. It begins with a crime—a murder—and ends with an ominous hint to the audience. However, the passage does not at all reveal what the narrator chose to do and would later come to regret. A book featuring this passage would likely end with the solving of the murder and the revealing of the true circumstances of the narrator’s decision.

III. Types of Mystery

Mysteries are defined as either nonfictional or fictional, and there are further divisions within each involving the combination of other literary genres.

a. Fiction Mysteries

Fictional mysteries are stories that can be realistic or fantastic in nature, but are not specifically based on true events. They overlap with other literary genres, such as fantasy (most commonly to create gothic fiction), thrillers, horror, crime fiction, historical fiction, and even science fiction. Detective fiction, which explicitly features a detective solving a crime, is perhaps the most popular form of fictional mystery, however, it is nowadays considered a separate genre of literature.

b. Nonfiction Mysteries

Nonfiction mystery books cover a wide range of topics that address true events, often involving mysteries of history, science, religion, magic, the supernatural, or the afterlife. For example, there are many works on unsolved crimes, unexplainable disappearances of people or groups of people, strange sightings like Bigfoot, the Lochness Monster, and UFOs, or mysterious places that seem to be haunted. Nonfiction mysteries are also a very popular genre for documentary and reality television shows, often focusing on mysteries that remain unsolved or unexplainable.

 *An important difference between fiction and nonfiction mysteries is that fiction mysteries almost always end with the mystery being solved, while nonfiction mysteries typically exist to address mysteries that remain unsolved.

IV. Importance of Mystery

Mysteries began to gain popularity in the Victorian era, mostly in the form of gothic literature, which was primarily for women. Since then it has developed in both form and reach, and has become a widely read genre among male and female readers of all ages. Mysteries are important because they feature topics that are usually both fascinating and troubling to the human mind—unsolved crimes, unexplained questions and events in natural and human history, supernatural curiosities, and so on.

V. Examples of Mystery in Pop Culture

 Example 1

The popular series of teen mystery fiction novels Pretty Little Liars and television series by the same name follows the mystery of the disappearance of a teenage girl named Alison, as seen through the eyes of her friends, who were supposedly the last people to ever see her. The following a promotional clip for the pilot episode of the TV series:

Pretty Little Liars — Episode 1 Extended Promo

Here, the writers immediately establish the show as a mystery by opening the series with the night that Alison went missing. Later the audience learns that Alison was declared dead when a body was found, however, the mystery continues as her friends receive messages and threats about personal things, which are always signed from “A.” The entire series centers on the mystery of A’s identity and the circumstances of Alison’s disappearance and murder, and, the possibility that she is still alive.

Example 2

For nearly twenty years the nonfiction mystery television series Unsolved Mysteries entertained its audience with stories of unexplained events and crimes in the United States. It featured true accounts of mysteries of every nature—crime, murder, UFOs, missing persons, separated family members or friends, ghost stories—as told by real witnesses, historians, detectives, and so on.

Unsolved Mysteries TV series 1987 — Trailer

Because of its popularity and ability to reach the public, the show was also known for occasionally helping to solve crimes and mysteries—after episodes aired, viewers would sometimes contact the show with information that helped solve a crime, find a missing person, or reunite people who had been separated. Unsolved Mysteries would share these success stories in later episodes, often updating the audience weeks, months or years after a story originally aired.

VI. Examples of Mystery in Literature

Example 1

The late 1800’s gave rise to the iconic fictional character Sherlock Holmes, a detective who is featured in a series of mystery novels and short stories written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Most of the stories are told from the perspective of Dr. Watson, Holmes’s assistant and companion. Holmes is an independent detective based in London with eccentric personality and highly logical reasoning skills. Below is a short selection from the novel The Hound of Baskerville:

Another item had been added to that constant and apparently purposeless series of small mysteries which had succeeded each other so rapidly. Setting aside the whole grim story of Sir Charles’s death, we had a line of inexplicable incidents all within the limits of two days, which included the receipt of the printed letter, the black-bearded spy in the hansom, the loss of the new brown boot, the loss of the old black boot, and now the return of the new brown boot. Holmes sat in silence in the cab as we drove back to Baker Street, and I knew from his drawn brows and keen face that his mind, like my own, was busy in endeavouring to frame some scheme into which all these strange and apparently disconnected episodes could be fitted.

Here, Watson is running through some of the clues to the victim’s death in his head. He also expresses his familiarity with Holmes’ character and skills by telling the audience that he knows the detective is finding the connections between all of these clues in his mind; which will inevitably lead to the solving of the mysterious murder.

Example 2

The Southern Vampire Mysteries, also known as The Sookie Stackouse Novels, are a  bestselling series of mystery romance novels by mystery author Charlaine Harris. As alluded by its title(s), the series is narrated by the protagonist Sookie Stackhouse and follows her relationship with vampires and other supernatural beings. The novels also inspired provocative HBO television series True Blood. The plot takes place in present day Louisiana, and often references popular culture, as in the selection below:

MYSTERY IMAGE

 “Bubba” is supposed to be Elvis, who Bill claims was turned into a vampire on the night he died decades before. Harris lets the audience in on little secrets like this and references them throughout the series. Each novel Sookie faces a new mystery, and she always plays a substantial role in solving it. Like many mystery series, each Southern Vampire Series book could essentially exist as its own standalone story, as it introduces and solves a new mystery in each novel; however, the true popularity lies in the following of Sookie and her life.

VII. Related Terms

 Detective Fiction

Detective fiction is considered its own genre of literature, though it is technically a subgenre of mystery. These stories feature a detective investigating a situation or a crime, commonly a murder. It is popular form of crime fiction and gothic fiction, where the protagonist is most often an official detective investigating a crime, or a person who acts as an unofficial detective to solve a more personally relevant mystery, respectively.

VIII. Conclusion

In conclusion, fiction mysteries engage readers in an unexplained event or situation from its occurrence to its resolution, while nonfiction mysteries allow authors to explore unsolved or unexplainable mysteries of the world. The genre can be successfully combined with many other styles of literature to create engaging stories for audiences of all ages.

тайна, таинство, мистерия, таинственный

существительное

- тайна

unsolved mystery — неразрешённая /неразгаданная/ тайна
wrapped in mystery — окутанный тайной; покрытый мраком неизвестности
to make a mystery of smth. — делать из чего-л. тайну /секрет/
it is a mystery to me how he managed to do it — мне непонятно /для меня остаётся тайной/, как ему удалось это сделать

- таинственность

I see no mystery about it — я в этом не вижу ничего таинственного

- церк. таинство
- pl. тайные обряды (особ. у древних народов)
- театр. мистерия (тж. mystery play)
- разг. детективный роман или рассказ (тж. mystery book)
- уст. ремесло
- ист. гильдия

Мои примеры

Словосочетания

clarify the mystery surrounding her death — прояснить загадку её смерти  
The mystery has been heightened by many embellishments in subsequent retellings. — При последующих пересказах эта история стала ещё более загадочной за счёт многократного приукрашивания.  
a faint clue to the origin of the mystery — слабый намёк на разгадку этой тайны / маленький ключик к разгадке этой тайны  
to expound the mystery — объяснить тайну  
to hold the key to a mystery — знать разгадку тайны  
murder mystery — тайна убийства  
shrouded / wrapped in mystery — окутанный тайной  
to clear up / fathom / solve / unravel a mystery — открыть, разгадать тайну  
mystery play — театр.; ист. мистерия  
bag of mystery — уст.; шутл. сосиска, колбаса  
deep mystery — непостижимая загадка  
mystery shopper — тайный покупатель  
mystery shopping — виртуальная покупка  

Примеры с переводом

It was a mystery to me.

Это было для меня тайной.

The mystery has been solved.

Тайна раскрыта.

The reason why she did it is a mystery.

По какой причине она это сделала, остаётся загадкой.

She reads a lot of mystery novels.

Она читает много детективных романов.

The book gives the reader plenty of clues to solve the mystery.

Книга даёт читателю множество подсказок, помогающих раскрыть эту тайну.

The affair is wrapped up in mystery.

Это дело окутано тайной.

How it got out is a mystery.

Как это выплыло наружу — остаётся загадкой.

ещё 23 примера свернуть

Примеры, ожидающие перевода

Her dark glasses gave her an air of mystery.

The origins of this civilization are shrouded in mystery

…the cloak of mystery that surrounds the royal family…

Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке , напротив примера.

Возможные однокоренные слова

Формы слова

noun
ед. ч.(singular): mystery
мн. ч.(plural): mysteries

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