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mantic

[ UK /mˈɑːntɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. resembling or characteristic of a prophet or prophecy
    a kind of sibylline book with ready and infallible answers to questions
    mantic powers
    the high priest's divinatory pronouncement

How To Use mantic In A Sentence

  • As he rose in society, his romantic entanglements damaged his career and he returned to his former sweetheart in Ireland. Times, Sunday Times
  • She's the prettiest, most ethereal romantic heroine in the movies.
  • The eight romances for saxophone and piano are indeed romantic.
  • We may reasonably shake our heads at these romantic resolves. Times, Sunday Times
  • Its candlelit restaurant is one of the most romantic spots on the island, with a menu that goes beyond green curry. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even the plural in their name seems to make them extend farther into a distant romantic haze.
  • Objective To study the event-related potential N400 character of semantic matching of sentence-ending words in childhood and adolescent schizophrenia.
  • The full moon instilling some notion of romanticism in the minds of the stupid humans.
  • During this time, Lockhart met Moura Budberg, a Ukrainian-born baroness, who became the love of his life, and with whom, according to his son, he remained romantically involved until his death in 1970.
  • I haven’t got a problem with the narrater, he’s obviously romanticized or the opposite, in this case, but he’s an interesting person, so I’m not adverse to hearing his side of things. “The Worst Book I Have Read in the Past Three Years” : Edward Champion’s Reluctant Habits
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