[
UK
/ɛntʃˈɑːntɹəs/
]
NOUN
- a woman who is considered to be dangerously seductive
- a female sorcerer or magician
How To Use enchantress In A Sentence
- O thou great Enchantress, to whom are equally subject the streets of Paris and the realm of Faerie, thou who hast sounded to the deeps that circumfluent ocean called "practical human life," and hast taught the acutest of its navigators to consider how far its courses are guided by orbs in heaven, -- canst thou solve this riddle which, if it perplexes me, must perplex so many? The Parisians — Complete
- She had long, flowing red hair that had streaks of black in it, making her look like a combination of a tiger and an enchantress.
- This opening is repeated several times through the hundreds of pages of The Enchantress of Florence as the story moves away from Florence, then returns; and moves away, and returns; and finally moves away again, to vanish into the Mughal emperor's all-absorbing khayal. In the Emperor's Dream House
- There were four ranks a person could be - witch or wizard, mage, enchanter or enchantress, and sorcerer or sorceress.
- The enchantress had cursed not only me, but also the entire castle.
- It speaks of jousts, tournaments, wizards, falconry, enchantresses, damsels in distress, wars, quests, and the code of chivalry.
- Elsewhere, various and sundry monsters, sea serpents, dragons and bare-breasted enchantresses were dealt with methodically.
- He wanted to be alone with this enchantress, this damsel in distress. YELLOW BIRD
- Love was like an enchantress seducing them with its magic.
- The familiar semi-magical Petrarchan markers are in place – a forest where the weary lover-hunter will lose his way, the elusive and singular deer who is both prey and fatal enchantress. Love in literature