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Conjuror   /kˈɑndʒərər/   Listen
Conjuror

noun
1.
Someone who performs magic tricks to amuse an audience.  Synonyms: conjurer, illusionist, magician, prestidigitator.
2.
A witch doctor who practices conjury.  Synonyms: conjure man, conjurer.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Conjuror" Quotes from Famous Books



... because it is the ruin of a joke to be unintelligible. A man may pretend to be a poet: he can no more pretend to be a wit than he can pretend to bring rabbits out of a hat without having learnt to be a conjuror. Therefore, it may be submitted, there was a certain discipline in the old antithetical couplet of Pope and his followers. If it did not permit of the great liberty of wisdom used by the minority of great geniuses, neither did it permit of the great liberty of folly which is ...
— Twelve Types • G.K. Chesterton

... to Merlin will be explained by a glance at the parallel sonnets above. Merlin was entirely Coleridge's idea. A conjuror of that name was just then among ...
— The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb, Vol. 5 • Edited by E. V. Lucas

... head-first into the original Eagle (now duly repaired) with the velocity and agility of a man long accustomed to the fact that seconds are more precious than six-pences and minutes than banknotes. And Carthew slammed the door on him like a conjuror performing the final act of a trick before an audience of three ...
— Mr. Prohack • E. Arnold Bennett

... had with the far-famed wizard of the Moor. "Isabella has all the luck at home and abroad! Her hawk strikes down the black-cock; her eyes wound the gallant; no chance for her poor companions and kinswomen; even the conjuror cannot escape the force of her charms. You should, in compassion, cease to be such an engrosser, my dear Isabel, or at least set up shop, and sell off all the goods you do not mean to keep ...
— The Black Dwarf • Sir Walter Scott

... conferences speedily break up; the Third Estate, now ready and resolute, the whole world backing it, returns to its Hall of the Three Orders; and Necker to the Oeil-de-Boeuf, with the character of a disconjured conjuror there—fit only for dismissal. (Debates, 1st to 17th June 1789 (in ...
— The French Revolution • Thomas Carlyle


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