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[ US /bɪˈwɪtʃt/ ]
[ UK /bɪwˈɪt‍ʃt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. captured, as if under a spell

How To Use bewitched In A Sentence

  • After the religious police arrested Faliah, she was convicted in April 2006 by a court in the town of Quraiyat on the basis of her coerced confession and statements of witnesses who said she had "bewitched" them. Rights Group Wants Saudis To Commute Death Sentence of Convicted "Witch"
  • The Duke oversees the case between Brabantio and Othello, whom he believes to have bewitched his daughter with magic.
  • As he now lay trembling there, he recalled Melchior's words about the valley being bewitched, the falling stones, the disappearance of the crystals; and he was fast growing into a belief that the old legends must be true, and that there really existed a race of horrible little beings beneath the earth, whose duty it was to protect the treasures of the subterranean lands, and that this was one of them on the watch to take the crystals from their hands. The Crystal Hunters A Boy's Adventures in the Higher Alps
  • We were as bewitched and delighted as any first-timer.
  • It is interesting that the root of the word 'fascinate' comes from the French, 'fasciner' meaning to entrance or charm, as in witchcraft, while our modern usage of the term still relates to the meaning, to be bewitched or held spell bound. All Hallows Eve
  • In the Lewis they call the serpent _righinn_, that is, '_a princess; _' and they say that the serpent is a princess bewitched. Macleod of Dare
  • Is your sword bewitched, or under the influence of some imperial charm? The Man in the Iron Mask
  • I was bewitched when I cast my eyes on him at my father's place.
  • By bedtime, you'll be utterly bewitched. Times, Sunday Times
  • All this taken into consideration, it should then, come as no surprise that the musical has bewitched audiences for so long - as it surely will for many years to come.
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