Synonyms for witch


Grammar : Noun
Spell : wich
Phonetic Transcription : wɪtʃ


Définition of witch

Origin :
  • 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]
  • noun person who casts spells over others
Example sentences :
  • Viviette, going out last, looked up at him with one of her witch's glances.
  • Extract from : « Viviette » by William J. Locke
  • She was so old no one knew exactly when she was built, but sailed like a witch.
  • Extract from : « Ned Myers » by James Fenimore Cooper
  • The schooner sailed like a witch, carrying only two gaff-topsails.
  • Extract from : « Ned Myers » by James Fenimore Cooper
  • So died the witch, and nevermore do mothers say when children misbehave.
  • Extract from : « Indian Legends of Vancouver Island » by Alfred Carmichael
  • The house was filled with people, they being curious to see the witch.
  • Extract from : « The Works of Whittier, Volume V (of VII) » by John Greenleaf Whittier
  • But when folks thinks you're a witch, it ain't in human natur' not to fool 'em.
  • Extract from : « Meadow Grass » by Alice Brown
  • She declared she was thrifty, but neither a miser, nor a kidnaper, nor a witch.
  • Extract from : « Welsh Fairy Tales » by William Elliott Griffis
  • And with these words he looked at a witch and said: “You may go!”
  • Extract from : « The Chinese Fairy Book » by Various
  • The witch hesitated, but he ordered his servants to seize her and thrust her into the stream.
  • Extract from : « The Chinese Fairy Book » by Various
  • She was a sort of witch, tall and lean, who walked like an ostrich.
  • Extract from : « The Memoirs of Louis XIV., His Court and The Regency, Complete » by Duc de Saint-Simon

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