HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of hocus-pocuser | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1

Definitions

One who hocus-pocuses.

Examples

“Such may be the interpretation of this phrase; and such may be the sense in which thousands of democrats will take it; but such is not the sense in which the Texas hocus pocusers mean it.”
“Old Plu had promised, as per Admiral Fitzroy’s patent hocus-pocusser, to give us a taste of his quality; and it is unnecessary, in this connection, to observe that the venerable disciple of Swithin the Saint was as good as his word.”
“And when they make the still further complaint that unless they worm their way into the personal favor of the reviewers by hocus-pocus of one sort or another, such as seeking advice on actors, beseeching a conference over a play manuscript, u. s. w., they will receive treatment not so kind as that vouchsafed a more proficient hocus-pocuser, they say, too, what may or may not, for aught I know, be true.”
“A well-known movie actress (who rose to fame in the last year) just bought up her old negatives from M. Korman, the hocus-pocusser. They included several nudes …”
“Howard Brooks, the hocus pocuser at Esquire, will break in one new trick and two new gags next week …”
“YOUR SENTRY on the Dawn Patrol will have a very tough time of it this evening. It seems that everybody has suddenly decided on a new show. The Clover Club brings in an entirely new one, with the Velero sisters, the hocus pocusser Guili-Guili and others.”
“THE latest hocus-pocuser to adopt the art of magic as a means of selling safety is Sgt. Carl S. Pike, of the Kent County sheriff’s office, Grand Rapids, Mich.”
“A crew of table-tapping thaumaturgists and paint-pot hocus-pocussers is now at work with runes and incantations, said Mesmerist Green (who in ordinary life, Director of Choral Music and dramatic coach at Delaware Valley High), transforming the theatre stage into the living room of the pleasant English country home owned by Charles Condomine, the hero—or victim—of the haunted hilarity.”
“Best known of the early “talking” horses was Morocco, shown here with Banks, the British magician. Seventeenth-century audiences believed that both horse and hocus-pocuser consorted with the devil.”
“For the hocus-pocussers, choice between alternative analyses was a matter of mere personal taste and certainly not of correct versus incorrect; there was no ‘right answer’, so it was pointless to worry about cases such as the one cited.[…]One suspects that the hocus-pocussers may have been happy enough to regard linguistic descriptions as true so long as the descriptive techniques worked unproblematically, and that they simply held the hocus-pocus position in reserve to be used if they encountered an impasse such as the Chinese case described above.”
“‘And you are a slanderer!’ / ‘Uncle, I beg you—!’ / ‘Look out! What are you trying to do? You’ll knock over the table!’ / ‘Medieval hocus pocuser!’ / ‘Vilifier! Liar!’”
“Unfortunately Hutton is very misleading about the hocus-pocus position when, speaking for the hocus-pocusser, he compares the relation of the representation of a sentence to a particular utterance with the relation between a picture of a horse and what that picture depicts, when the picture is not a portrait of an actual horse.”
“Strange or not, the hocus-pocus linguist holds that we cannot invoke descriptive fidelity as a criterion for choosing between different representations. In the light of this, Sampson questions whether the pure ‘hocus-pocusser’ would have any incentive to continue in linguistics.[…]However, it is evident that Robins, like Firth, cannot be classified as a hocus-pocusser.[…]A more purely hocus-pocus form of argument that the would-be hocus-pocusser might adopt runs as follows.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

See also

Learn this word in context

See hocus-pocuser used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course