Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Ignis fatuus \Ig"nis fat"u*us\; pl. {Ignes fatui}. [L. ignis
fire + fatuus foolish. So called in allusion to its tendency
to mislead travelers.]
1. A phosphorescent light that appears, in the night, over
marshy ground, supposed to be occasioned by the
decomposition of animal or vegetable substances, or by
some inflammable gas; -- popularly called also
{Will-with-the-wisp}, or {Will-o'-the-wisp}, and
{Jack-with-a-lantern}, or {Jack-o'-lantern}.
Source : WordNet®
ignis fatuus
n 1: a pale light sometimes seen at night over marshy ground
[syn: {friar's lantern}, {jack-o'-lantern}, {will-o'-the-wisp}]
2: an illusion that misleads [syn: {will-o'-the-wisp}]