sorcery

[sawr-suh-ree] /ˈsɔr sə ri/
noun, plural sorceries.
1.
the art, practices, or spells of a person who is supposed to exercise supernatural powers through the aid of evil spirits; black magic; witchery.
Origin
1250-1300; Middle English sorcerie < Medieval Latin sorceria. See sorcerer, -y3
Synonyms
enchantment. See magic.
Examples from the web for sorcery
  • More than one pointed to the elbow when referring to witchcraft, indicating the site in the body where sorcery is said to reside.
  • They give this tale of sorcery and time travel an aura of mystery that is entirely appropriate.
  • Fable takes this core of swords and sorcery and wraps it in a kind of fantasy life-simulation game.
  • There is no secret sorcery that informs work as a federal lawyer.
  • But in time the potion exacts a price through clever sorcery, leaving you alone and stranded amid a bleak landscape.
  • The words were well cloaked in her gentlest voice, her hardy optimism, her subtle sorcery.
  • Unfortunately, his audience thought he used sorcery.
  • It's swords and sorcery, so naturally there's violence involved.
  • Only an extraordinary concentration on life and art, simultaneously, could achieve such sorcery.
  • Unfortunately, the midwife has been accused of sorcery by the local priests and has been sentenced to die.
British Dictionary definitions for sorcery

sorcery

/ˈsɔːsərɪ/
noun (pl) -ceries
1.
the art, practices, or spells of magic, esp black magic, by which it is sought to harness occult forces or evil spirits in order to produce preternatural effects in the world
Derived Forms
sorcerous, adjective
Word Origin
C13: from Old French sorcerie, from sorciersorcerer
Word Origin and History for sorcery
n.

c.1300, from Old French sorcerie, from sorcier "sorcerer, wizard," from Medieval Latin sortiarius "teller of fortunes by lot; sorcerer," literally "one who influences fate or fortune," from Latin sors (genitive sortis) "lot, fate, fortune" (see sort (n.)).

Encyclopedia Article for sorcery

the practice of malevolent magic, derived from casting lots as a means of divining the future in the ancient Mediterranean world. Some scholars distinguish sorcery from witchcraft by noting that it is learned rather than intrinsic. Other scholars, noting that modern witches claim to learn their craft, suggest that sorcery's intent is always evil and that of witchcraft can be either good or bad. In the early Christian era, the term was applied to any magician or wizard but by the Middle Ages only to those who allegedly practiced magic intended to harm others. In Western popular culture, and in Western children's literature in particular, the sorcerer often assumes a more positive guise.

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