Meaning of necromanceress | Babel Free
Definitions
A female necromancer.
Examples
“And with her wit she shall brighten the dimness her pathos brings into our eyes, till tears and smiles struggle together beneath the witchery of the fair necromanceress.”
““And now that I remember,” he added, with a coolness that ill-concealed his anticipated triumph, “beneath her mantle she wore the dress of a necromanceress.””
“Of these, one’s face showed dim through a cloud of smoke from a hot dish of stewed oysters, like the face of your future husband in one of those charming visions conjured up by the great second-sight necromanceress, Madame ⸺ from Paris; […]”
“Hot and parching tears rolled down the withered face of Mahora, as she pressed the vermeiled cheek of the lovely being who had won her way to the grim and seared heart of the necromanceress.”
“The woman approached closer to her with outstretched hand as if inviting her into communion with evil powers. She swayed back and forth for a moment and then for the second time lay senseless at the feet of the necromanceress.”
“Miss Nancy Price can’t be blamed for overdoing her necromanceress. The author had done that already. And I didn’t see how she could have dealt with it better.”
“The dramatic sequel of these verses show that the woman was a necromanceress. Saul consulted her because he wished to consult the dead, and to consult the dead was a very ancient practice in Israel.”
“Radak expresses wonder at these remarks: If God raised Samuel in order to inform Saul of his fate, why did he not tell him through dreams or through the Urim or through a prophet instead of this necromanceress?”
“Is not thy grave-pit (delivered) to a howling jackal (lntn ‘tq) / (in)to the hands/chant of the necromanceress (lit. ‘pit-lady’, OT ’ēšet) ’o(w)b; cf. “St. Ug. II”, op. cit.)”
“Just as I was contemplating moving on I was summoned again . . . this time by a Necromanceress who took great delight in trying to end my adventure with the sharp end of her sword.”
“But what can I do? I’m not a necromanceress, you know. I can’t summon up King Bran and ask him to finger your she-demon for you.”
“But it is Lucan himself who brings the locus to its apogee (Morford 67), glorying first in the exploits of the witches of Thessaly (Pharsalia 6.434–506), then outdoing himself with the bizarrely hyperbolic excesses of the arch-necromanceress Erictho (Pharsalia 6.507–68).”
CEFR level
C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.