n.
      - the non-physical part of a person which is the seat of emotions and character. 
▸this regarded as surviving after the death of the body, often manifested as a ghost.
 ▸a supernatural being.
 - the prevailing or typical quality or mood:
 the nation's egalitarian spirit.
 ▸a person identified with their role or most prominent quality:
 he was a leading spirit in the conference.
  ▸
(spirits)
 a person's mood.
 - courage, energy, and determination.
 - the real meaning or intention of something as opposed to its strict verbal interpretation.
 - chiefly Brit. strong distilled alcoholic drink such as rum. 
▸
[
with modifier]
 a volatile liquid, especially a fuel, prepared by distillation:
 aviation spirit.
  ▸
archaic a solution of volatile components extracted from something:
 spirits of turpentine.
 - archaic a highly refined substance or fluid thought to govern vital phenomena.
 
v.
 (spirits, spiriting, spirited)
  - 
(usu. spirit something away)
 convey rapidly and secretly.
 - 
(spirit someone up)
 archaic animate or cheer up someone.
 
 
  Phrase
  
    - in 
(or in the)
 spirit
 in thought or intention though not physically.  - when the spirit moves one
 when one feels inclined to do something. 
[a phr. orig. in Quaker use, with ref. to the Holy Spirit.]
 
   
  Etymology
  ME: from Anglo-Norman Fr., from L. spiritus ‘breath, spirit’, from spirare ‘breathe’.