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 witchcraft ['witʃkræft]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 巫术, 魔法, 魔力



    witchcraft
    [ noun ]
    the art of sorcery
    <noun.cognition>


    Wicca \Wic"ca\ (w[i^]k"k[.a]), prop. n. [OE. wicche wizard, AS.
    wicce, fem., wicca, masc.; see also {witch} and {wicked}.]
    1. A religion derived from pre-Christian times, also called
    {Witchcraft}[4], which practices a benevolent reverence
    for nature, and recognizes two deities, variously viewed
    as Mother & Father, Goddess & God, Female & Male, etc.;
    its practitioners are called Wiccans, Wiccas, or witches.
    Since there is no central authority to propagate dogma,
    the beliefs and practices of Wiccans vary significantly.
    [PJC]

    Encouraged by court rulings recognizing witchcraft
    as a legal religion, an increasing number of books
    related to the subject, and the continuing cultural
    concern for the environment, Wicca -- as
    contemporary witchcraft is often called -- has been
    growing in the United States and abroad. It is a
    major element in the expanding ``neo-pagan''
    movement whose members regard nature itself as
    charged with divinity. --Gustav
    Niebuhr (N. Y.
    Times, Oct.
    31, 1999, p.
    1)
    [PJC]

    ``I don't worship Satan, who I don't think exists,
    but I do pray to the Goddess of Creation.'' said
    Margot S. Adler, a New York correspondent for
    National Public Radio and a Wiccan practitioner.
    ``Wicca is not anti-Christian or pro-Christian, it's
    pre-Christian.'' --Anthony
    Ramirez (N. Y.
    Times Aug. 22,
    1999, p. wk 2)
    [PJC]

    Note: Wicca is a ditheistic religion, also called Witchcraft,
    founded on the beliefs and doctrines of pre-Roman
    Celts, including the reverence for nature and the
    belief in a universal balance. Though frequently
    practiced in covens, solitary practitioners do exist.
    The modern form of the religion was popularized in 1954
    by Gerald Gardener's Witchcraft Today. It is viewed as
    a form of neo-paganism.
    Wicca recognizes two deities, visualized as Mother &
    Father, Goddess & God, Female & Male, etc. These
    dieties are nameless, but many Wiccans adopt a name
    with which they refer to the two: Diana is a popular
    name for the Goddess to take, among others such as
    Artemis, Isis, Morrigan, etc. Some of her symbols are:
    the moon; the ocean; a cauldron; and the labrys
    (two-headed axe), among others. The God is of equal
    power to the Goddess, and takes on names such as
    Apollo, Odin, Lugh, etc. A small number of his symbols
    are: the sun; the sky; a horn (or two horns); and
    others.
    Witchcraft is not a Christian denomination; there is no
    devil in its mythos, thus the devil cannot be
    worshiped, and the medieval view of Witches as
    Satan-worshipers is erroneous. Satanists are not
    Witches and Witches are not Satanists. Both have a
    tendency to be offended when the two are confused.
    In the Wiccan religion male Witches are not
    ``Warlocks''. The term Warlock comes from Scottish,
    meaning 'oathbreaker', 'traitor', or 'devil'. Its
    application to male witches is of uncertain origin.
    The Wiccan Rede, ``An it harm none, do what thou wilt''
    comes in many variations. All of them say the same
    thing, ``Do as you wish, just don't do anything to harm
    anyone.'' It is implied that 'anyone' includes one's
    self.
    Witches practice in groups called Covens or as solitary
    practitioners, and some practice ``magic'', which is to
    say, they pray. Since the one rule that Witches have
    requires that they can not do harm, harmful magic does
    not exist in Wicca. In Wicca, ``magic'' is simply
    subtly altering small things, to gain a desired effect.
    Wicca, sometimes called Neo-Witchcraft, was revived in
    the 1950s, when the last laws against Witchcraft were
    repealed. Gerald Gardner founded Gardnerian Wicca
    sometime after his book, Witchcraft Today, was
    published in 1954. Raymond Buckland, in America, did
    much the same that Gardner did in Europe -- stood up to
    the misconceptions about Witchcraft.
    Two other books describing the modern practice of Wicca
    are:
    Wicca: A Guide for the Solitary Practitioner, by Scott
    Cunningham, Llewellyn Publications, 1988.
    Buckland's Complete Book of Witchcraft, by Raymond
    Buckland, Llewellyn Publications, 1975.
    [PJC]

    2. A practitioner of Wicca, also commonly called a {Wiccan},
    {Wicca}, or {witch} .
    [PJC]

    For at least one person who has seen ``The Blair
    Witch Project'', the surprise hit movie of the
    summer did not so much terrify as infuriate. One
    long slur against witches, said Selena Fox, a witch,
    or Wicca, as male and female American witches prefer
    to call themselves. --Anthony
    Ramirez (N. Y.
    Times, Aug.
    22, 1999, p.
    wk 2)
    [PJC]

    witchcraft \witch"craft`\ (w[i^]ch"kr[a^]ft), n. [AS.
    wiccecr[ae]ft.]
    1. The practices or art of witches.

    2. Hence: Sorcery; enchantments; intercourse with evil
    spirits.
    [1913 Webster + PJC]

    3. Power more than natural; irresistible influence.

    He hath a witchcraft
    Over the king in 's tongue. --Shak.

    4. Adherence to or the practice of {Wicca}. In this sense the
    term does not necessarily include attempts at practice of
    magic, other than by prayers to the deities.
    [PJC]

    1. It is not limited to England: in Sweden magpies are connected with witchcraft and in Scotland if they fly near your window it heralds a death.
    2. State Chief Minister Jyoti Basu said at least 20 women were killed in West Bengal in 1987 on suspicion of practicing witchcraft.
    3. She speaks at colleges and elsewhere, explaining that witchcraft is pre-Christian nature religion, not Satanism or black magic.
    4. The pope has urged Roman Catholics to shun such practices as witchcraft and polygamy, stressing that the basic tenets of the faith cannot be compromised.
    5. He reported a 1983 incident that he said was witnessed by his family, in which Jamba residents were gathered around a bonfire and a family was doused with gasoline and burned for witchcraft.
    6. The church has also been hard pressed to interpret the relationship between superstition and religion in a continent where some church ministers have been accused of practicing witchcraft and voodoo.
    7. The parent's complaint stemmed from a publication, Intuitive Directory, that listed Ms. Dick as one of several people in the Kansas City area who practice witchcraft.
    8. The most frequent objections, the report said, were to materials seen as containing "offensive language" and those perceived as touching on "satanism, witchcraft and the occult."
    9. Other Spaniards see Galicians (or Gallegos) as melancholy, broodingly pessimistic people, obsessed with death and witchcraft.
    10. Investigators went to a Berkeley religion expert with the items. They also presented the expert with desperate letters Toussaint mailed before his suicide blaming Rubia and her "witchcraft" for his bad health and business failures.
    11. Producer John Purdie says 'Despite the language problems, Malawian audiences are weaned on an oral story-telling tradition and live in a world where witchcraft and power politics are daily realities.
    12. She smiled suddenly, her mouth describing a great V. 'It has nothing to do with magic or witchcraft.
    13. Coelho, a new-wave sorcerer with a touch for turning yarns of witchcraft and mysticism into best-selling books, has in one magic leap become Brazil's No. 1 literary sensation.
    14. Ms. Dick resigned from the tenured teaching position she had held for seven years in February after complaints from a parent that she practiced witchcraft.
    15. The practice of witchcraft is fairly widespread in the United States, but precise numbers are hard to come by.
    16. Despite the mystery, witchcraft and violence of his books, Hillerman bristles at any suggestion the reservation might be a dangerous place.
    17. A prosecutor calls it "witchcraft" and a psychologist says it's as reliable as a coin toss.
    18. The problem is, people see witchcraft, Satanism and the occult as all the same thing."
    19. A Dallas televangelist is enlisting "prayer warriors" for a Halloween attack on what he calls the satanic forces of witchcraft, drugs and perversion in San Francisco.
    20. Similarly, the traditional witchcraft the colonists had brought from England bore little relation to modern imitations.
    21. Fountain, who has claimed to be a former heroin addict and witchcraft practitioner, has said he had as many as 120 children living at his 28-acre compound outside Lucedale.
    22. "Our smugglers do not pray to the devil," said one resident, Ala Rosa Garza. "This (witchcraft and drugs) is something imported.
    23. In the 16th and 17th centuries there were many cases against people accused of lycanthropy, which was associated with witchcraft.
    24. But witchcraft and other "pagan" religions began long before Christianity.
    25. "She told me several times about witchcraft and things she believed in like curses and things like that," said Mrs. Antillon. "She used to tell me that she felt her mother-in-law had cursed her.
    26. Ms. Nussbaum, a children's book editor, denied that she was interested in satanic cults and witchcraft.
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