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conjuring

[ UK /kˈʌnd‍ʒəɹɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈkɑndʒɝɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. calling up a spirit or devil

How To Use conjuring In A Sentence

  • Despite a title suggesting it delivers a spot of abracadabra, The Conjuring pulls no rabbits out of hats.
  • Fascinated with the meeting of memory and language, adept at conjuring states of mind, and haunted by the violence wracking his homeland, Hemon is a stoic tragedian and a brilliant satirist. The Question of Bruno by Aleksandar Hemon: Book summary
  • Would such conjuring tricks give their writings more authority?
  • The only way he was able to recognize him was when a conjuring trick was found in one of his trouser pockets. A Channel of Peace
  • Cardinal, accused him of prevarication and weakness, and threw himself at her Majesty's feet, conjuring her in the name of the King her son, not to authorise, by an example which he called fatal, the insolence of a subject who was for wresting favours from his sovereign, sword in hand. Court Memoirs of France Series — Complete
  • The wizard of Wishaw was not to be denied, however, conjuring a remarkable - and intentional - shot in which he ricocheted one red off another and into the top corner.
  • In fact, I think it is this admiration for contraptions - for tricky pieces of apparatus that do this when you push that - which often attracts people to the field of conjuring.
  • They swung back and forth, conjuring eddies from the still air.
  • He's a self-confessed rebel, a ‘poet-in-the-sky’, a prestidigitator who can do conjuring tricks and pick a pocket or two.
  • A Western team filmed him with infrared cameras and, of course, were able to show that he was performing a conjuring trick.
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