impostor syndrome

Etymology
First observed as by Pauline R. Clance and Suzanne A. Imes in 1978.

Noun

 * 1)  A psychological phenomenon in which a person is unable to internalize his or her accomplishments, remaining convinced that he or she does not deserve any accompanying success.

Translations

 * Arabic: متلازمة المحتال
 * Armenian: ինքնակոչի համախտանիշ
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 冒名頂替綜合症
 * Dutch: oplichterssyndroom, bedriegerssyndroom, bedriegersfenomeen
 * Finnish: huijarisyndrooma
 * French: syndrome de l'imposteur, syndrome de l'autodidacte
 * German: Impostor-Syndrom, Impostor-Phänomen, Betrüger-Phänomen, Hochstapler-Syndrom, Mogelpackungs-Syndrom
 * Greek: σύνδρομο του απατεώνα
 * Hebrew: תסמונת המתחזה
 * Indonesian: sindrom penyemu
 * Italian: sindrome dell'impostore
 * Japanese: インポスター症候群
 * Korean: 가면증후군, 가면현상
 * Kurdish:
 * Central Kurdish: کۆنیشانی فریودەر
 * Latin: syndroma impostoris
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: bedragersyndromet
 * Persian: سندرم ایمپاستر
 * Polish: syndrom oszusta
 * Portuguese: síndrome do impostor, síndrome da fraude, fenómeno do impostor
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: síndrome del impostor, síndrome de fraude, fenómeno del impostor
 * Swedish: bluffsyndromet
 * Turkish: sahtekar sendromu
 * Ukrainian: синдро́м самозва́нця