Definitionn. the belief in magical spells that harness occult forces or evil spirits to produce unnatural effects in the world
Last update: October 8, 2015
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He learnt necromancy. [Please select]
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Through the dream the living was put into communication with the dead, which sometimes embodied itself in peculiar and pathetic literary forms, such as the Icelandic dream-verses imparted by the spirits of those who had been lost at sea or overwhelmed by the snow; and a whole series of steps leads up from necromancy to prophecy and oracle, .? [Please select]
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"Oh, there's no necromancy about it," he told her. [Please select]
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It suggested a carnival of Venice orientalized, painted over and set blazing with Japanese necromancy. [Please select]
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She knew nothing of the sublime bit of necromancy she had interrupted--poor soul. [Please select]
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Then, in a lower key, "It was not through animism and necromancy that the Jews came to believe in immortality." [Please select]
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His imagination seized upon the idea, as it would have seized on some theory of necromancy proved true and workable. [Please select]
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The suggestion of witchcraft was revived, and the opposing lawyers hurled tomes of necromancy at each other. [Please select]
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