How To Use Witchery In A Sentence

  • In witchery, the relationship between teacher and student is, to say the least, intimate.
  • I don't necessarily have a green thumb, but with my interest in kitchen witchery, I try to keep some herbs and other small plants growing.
  • The gipsy fascination, the abandoned, perverse bewitchery of this female devil of the dance is not to be described by mouth, typewriter, or quilled pen. The Merry-Go-Round
  • This, I say, is that which makes them sell eternity for a song, give away their souls for a trifle, and turn their backs upon glory and immortality, and God himself, under the pinch of any present pain, or the bewitchery of some present pleasure. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. IV.
  • If you're being troubled by witchery, maybe you can go stay with Rob.
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  • Primitive religion includes worship of natural, totem and ancestor, Manitou concept, witchery, taboos, religion festival and folk tales.
  • The pursuit has always interested my imagination more than any other, and I remember before having my first portrait taken, there was a great bewitchery in the idea, as if it were a magic process. Passages from the American Notebooks, Volume 2.
  • Sure they use samples, vocoders and other electronic witchery as well, but they avoid the sometimes thin, stiff house experience by using guitars, bass and drums as key ingredients.
  • This was the foundation for many religions, and for witchery.
  • Such witchery is the sounds, the vibration of sequacious/delicious surges (undertoning urges)/such a soft floating witchery of sound. [ Sounding Romantic: The Sound of Sound
  • Sure they use samples, vocoders and other electronic witchery as well, but they avoid the sometimes thin, stiff house experience by using guitars, bass and drums as key ingredients.
  • The poem recounts, with heavy tones and little irony, the kitschy mock-trial proceedings, in which an audience of tourists deems Bishop guilty of witchery.
  • But seals are extraordinarily cute, celebrities love them (have you ever seen Paul McCartney hug a cow?) and animal rights activists use that emotional bewitchery to tug on people's heartstrings. Toronto Sun
  • In American Indian traditions, witchery is different from Shamanism, though in many traditions, the two are separated by intent. ...um, Hellboy? Witches? Conan?
  • The "nighty" was, perforce, absent, much to the sorrow of Ann; but the witchery of the glorious voice entered again into the woman's soul, and, indeed, sent the entire congregation home in an awed silence that was the height of admiring homage. The Tangled Threads
  • The mothers had already exchanged new ways to use their witchery and little anecdotes about the past.
  • “It is the only honest ‘bewitchery’ that I have ever seen,” Kalas spat. Immortalis
  • The humiliation of beggary often produced resentments which, in turn, led to retaliation often in the form of pretended witchery: spreading white powder as threat to kill cattle or to make people ill.
  • They brought into the hot hard streets the witchery of the woodlands; and no one could inhale for a moment, in passing by, the sweet wafture of their fragrance without being transported in imagination to far-off scenes endeared to memory, and without a thrill of nameless tenderness at the heart. Roman Mosaics Or, Studies in Rome and Its Neighbourhood
  • It's just not possible unless by witchery to see into the future.
  • The festival traditional customs preserve pure and simple belief and witchery ceremony.
  • Could it have been some form of magic, or witchery?
  • Primitive religion includes worship of natural, totem and ancestor, Manitou concept, witchery, taboos, religion festival and folk tales.
  • The two men left the ball-room, -- where the handsome and resentful señoritas were preparing to avenge California with a battery of glance, a melody of tongue, and a witchery of grace that was to wreak havoc among these gallant officers, -- and after exchanging amenities over a bowl of punch, went out into the high-walled garden to smoke the cigarito. The Californians
  • She had, it is true, no fortune, but that of my friend was ample; and he delighted in the anticipation of indulging her in every elegant pursuit, and administering to those delicate tastes and fancies that spread a kind of witchery about the sex. Archive 2006-01-01
  • There is an integrated system of witchery and ghost world in Luxun's works.
  • The river, springing from a cleft in the Lozère chain, winding its impetuous way, enriched by many a mountain torrent, through the Aveyron, Tarn, and Garonne, finally disemboguing into the Garonne, has lavished all its witchery on its native place. The Roof of France
  • The slave mother is silenced and timid before women who embody the witchery of the kitchen, a culinary witchery that in terms of the text represents the power to nourish or kill, to lovingly embrace or smother.
  • Primitive religion includes worship of natural, totem and ancestor, Manitou concept, witchery, taboos, religion festival and folk tales.
  • Under its lordly bewitchery, Erastianism prevails in the Established Churches of the kingdom. The Covenants And The Covenanters Covenants, Sermons, and Documents of the Covenanted Reformation
  • I was exiled from my village when I was sixteen under the charge of witchery.
  • The truth is, he who shall duly consider these matters, will find that there is a certain bewitchery, or fascination in words, which makes them operate with a force beyond what we can naturally give an account of. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. II.
  • Their manners and movements are unaffected and elegant; they dress in exquisite taste; and with a grace peculiarly their own, their manners have a fascination and witchery which is perfectly irresistible. The Englishwoman in America
  • The Vice Dean reminded us of a significance of a comments of Enobarbus as a shrewd as good as mostly sarcastic spectator of this adore affair: an researcher both detered by his master's debility in agreeable to Cleopatra's charming energy as good as fascinated himself by a Egyptian queen's witchery. Philadelphia Reflections: Shakspere Society of Philadelphia
  • She had, it is true, no fortune, but that of my friend was ample; and he delighted in the anticipation of indulging her in every elegant pursuit, and administering to those delicate tastes and fancies that spread a kind of witchery about the sex. — “Her life,” said he, “shall be like a fairy tale.” The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon
  • Moffatt said she was afraid of witchery but she believed some artists really were witches and wizards - Francis Bacon, for example.
  • Among "the Prince's friends" the attacks upon him in the Dublin meetings were regarded as little short of treason; while by himself, it is well known the "witchery" resolutions of 1812 were neither forgotten nor forgiven. A Popular History of Ireland : from the Earliest Period to the Emancipation of the Catholics — Complete
  • ‘With all the witchery of the South in her eyes,’ Bankhead delivered such a fine performance that ‘all indications point to a brilliant and rapid climb to a place in the theatrical sun.’
  • Or is it a 'bewitchery'? "he asked, only half in joke. Far to Seek A Romance of England and India
  • It begins with an overview of witches and witchery.
  • All who have every set foot on these shores bear the same testimony to the elfin witchery of Nippon – the land of the rising sun. In Seven Stages: A Flying Trip Around the World
  • Directed by Stephen Bradley, and starring his wife, comedian Deirdre O'Kane, the story is of student Nathan, played by David Leon, who dies and is brought back to life via voodoo witchery by his mum (O'Kane).
  • It is not exactly manicured, but that just adds to its bewitchery. Times, Sunday Times
  • The slops and water-witcheries of the coffee - houses, varying only in sloppiness and witchery, never even approximate or suggest what you and I are accustomed to drink as tea and coffee. COFFEE-HOUSES AND DOSS-HOUSES
  • A serpent has stung me in my very orchard, an incestuous, adulterate beast born of witchery!
  • Is it to expose them to devilry and witchery at such a young, impressionable age, and all in the name of fun?
  • In my eyes this was grand witchery of the same proportions as the zombification chronicled in my comic books, or lightning, or popcorn making.
  • So," the king said with narrowed eyes," your witchery is complete. WATER BOOK TWO: REUNION
  • Visual jokes took precedence of vocal bewitchery. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The witchery of starshine played in her eyes and about her mouth. The Kempton-Wace Letters
  • It irritated their father to no end to hear his son praise the people of darkness and witchery.
  • But it was a most irreligious religion, made up of traditions and human inventions; a strange kind of bewitchery rather than religion; that they should choose rather that the Messiah should be cut off than that religion be changed. From the Talmud and Hebraica
  • The humiliation of beggary often produced resentments which, in turn, led to retaliation often in the form of pretended witchery: spreading white powder as threat to kill cattle or to make people ill.
  • This evidence of witchery is preposterous.
  • There exists a common faith in the demagogic witchery among the ethnic groups of Yunnan Province, and the erotic sorcery is one of the types.

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