witch

[wich] /wɪtʃ/
noun
1.
a person, now especially a woman, who professes or is supposed to practice magic or sorcery; a sorceress.
Compare warlock.
2.
a woman who is supposed to have evil or wicked magical powers:
witches in black robes and pointed hats.
3.
an ugly or mean old woman; hag:
the old witch who used to own this building.
4.
a person who uses a divining rod; dowser.
verb (used with object)
5.
to bring by or as by witchcraft (often followed by into, to, etc.):
She witched him into going.
6.
Archaic. to affect as if by witchcraft; bewitch; charm.
verb (used without object)
7.
to prospect with a divining rod; dowse.
adjective
8.
of, pertaining to, or designed as protection against witches.
Origin
before 900; Middle English wicche, Old English wicce (feminine; compare wicca(masculine) wizard; see wicked)
Related forms
witchhood, noun
witchlike, adjective
underwitch, noun
Examples from the web for witch
  • Over the course of five decades, these people were poisoned on a daily basis by a witch's brew of pesticides.
  • People who can think, vote for the good guy and not the wicked witch.
  • For some, she is the wicked witch of selfishness and privilege.
  • Money raised goes to help defray the costs of legal fees for scientists who are the subjects of the above-mentioned witch hunts.
  • To argue against an evolving universe is as insane as the witch hunts.
  • Chiropractic manipulation is a crock, they might as well put up signs that say witch doctor.
  • The witch is riding a broom which has a small plastic propeller extending from the bristle portion.
  • witch hazel is a natural astringent and eases irritation.
  • Edmunds witch trial, where he was influential in the outcome of the trial.
British Dictionary definitions for witch

witch1

/wɪtʃ/
noun
1.
historically, in mythology and fiction, a woman believed to practise magic or sorcery, esp black magic
2.
a practitioner of a Nature-based religion founded on ancient beliefs, which honours both a male and female divine principle and includes the practice of magic, esp healing magic, and divination
3.
(informal, derogatory) an ugly or wicked woman
4.
a fascinating or enchanting woman
5.
short for water witch
verb
6.
(transitive) to cause or change by or as if by witchcraft
7.
a less common word for bewitch
Derived Forms
witchlike, adjective
Word Origin
Old English wicca; related to Middle Low German wicken to conjure, Swedish vicka to move to and fro

witch2

/wɪtʃ/
noun
1.
a flatfish, Pleuronectes (or Glyptocephalus) cynoglossus, of N Atlantic coastal waters, having a narrow greyish-brown body marked with tiny black spots: family Pleuronectidae (plaice, flounders, etc)
Word Origin
C19: perhaps from witch1, alluding to the appearance of the fish
Word Origin and History for witch
n.

Old English wicce "female magician, sorceress," in later use especially "a woman supposed to have dealings with the devil or evil spirits and to be able by their cooperation to perform supernatural acts," fem. of Old English wicca "sorcerer, wizard, man who practices witchcraft or magic," from verb wiccian "to practice witchcraft" (cf. Low German wikken, wicken "to use witchcraft," wikker, wicker "soothsayer").

OED says of uncertain origin; Liberman says "None of the proposed etymologies of witch is free from phonetic or semantic difficulties." Klein suggests connection with Old English wigle "divination," and wig, wih "idol." Watkins says the nouns represent a Proto-Germanic *wikkjaz "necromancer" (one who wakes the dead), from PIE *weg-yo-, from *weg- "to be strong, be lively."

That wicce once had a more specific sense than the later general one of "female magician, sorceress" perhaps is suggested by the presence of other words in Old English describing more specific kinds of magical craft. In the Laws of Ælfred (c.890), witchcraft was specifically singled out as a woman's craft, whose practitioners were not to be suffered to live among the W. Saxons:

Ða fæmnan þe gewuniað onfon gealdorcræftigan & scinlæcan & wiccan, ne læt þu ða libban."
The other two words combined with it here are gealdricge, a woman who practices "incantations," and scinlæce "female wizard, woman magician," from a root meaning "phantom, evil spirit." Another word that appears in the Anglo-Saxon laws is lyblæca "wizard, sorcerer," but with suggestions of skill in the use of drugs, because the root of the word is lybb "drug, poison, charm." Lybbestre was a fem. word meaning "sorceress," and lybcorn was the name of a certain medicinal seed (perhaps wild saffron). Weekley notes possible connection to Gothic weihs "holy" and German weihan "consecrate," and writes, "the priests of a suppressed religion naturally become magicians to its successors or opponents." In Anglo-Saxon glossaries, wicca renders Latin augur (c.1100), and wicce stands for "pythoness, divinatricem." In the "Three Kings of Cologne" (c.1400) wicca translates Magi:
Þe paynyms ... cleped þe iij kyngis Magos, þat is to seye wicchis.
The glossary translates Latin necromantia ("demonum invocatio") with galdre, wiccecræft. The Anglo-Saxon poem called "Men's Crafts" has wiccræft, which appears to be the same word, and by its context means "skill with horses." In a c.1250 translation of "Exodus," witches is used of the Egyptian midwives who save the newborn sons of the Hebrews: "Ðe wicches hidden hem for-ðan, Biforen pharaun nolden he ben." Witch in reference to a man survived in dialect into 20c., but the fem. form was so dominant by 1601 that men-witches or he-witch began to be used. Extended sense of "young woman or girl of bewitching aspect or manners" is first recorded 1740. Witch doctor is from 1718; applied to African magicians from 1836.
At this day it is indifferent to say in the English tongue, 'she is a witch,' or 'she is a wise woman.' [Reginald Scot, "The Discoverie of Witchcraft," 1584]

Slang definitions & phrases for witch

witch

noun

A vicious woman •A euphemism for bitch: She's being very nasty about it, a real witch (1940s+)


witch in the Bible

Occurs only in Ex. 22:18, as the rendering of _mekhashshepheh_, the feminine form of the word, meaning "enchantress" (R.V., "sorceress"), and in Deut. 18:10, as the rendering of _mekhashshepheth_, the masculine form of the word, meaning "enchanter."