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Conjure up   /kˈɑndʒər əp/   Listen
verb
Conjure  v. t.  To affect or effect by conjuration; to call forth or send away by magic arts; to excite or alter, as if by magic or by the aid of supernatural powers. "The habitation which your prophet... conjured the devil into."
To conjure up, or make visible, as a spirit, by magic arts; hence, to invent; as, to conjure up a story; to conjure up alarms.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Conjure up" Quotes from Famous Books



... forcing a smile, "why conjure up visions of happiness which never can be realised? But even with you I do not think I could be happy here. There is something about the house which, when I first beheld it, filled me with unaccountable terror. Never since I was a mere infant have ...
— The Lancashire Witches - A Romance of Pendle Forest • William Harrison Ainsworth

... see you in anything but white again," he said. "You are a gracious vision to conjure up on stifling ...
— Senator North • Gertrude Atherton

... than a once-seen face. It had caused George a good deal of distress and inconvenience that, try as he might, he could not conjure up anything more than a vague vision of what the only girl in the world really looked like. He had carried away with him from their meeting in the cab only a confused recollection of eyes that shone and a mouth that curved ...
— A Damsel in Distress • Pelham Grenville Wodehouse

... seems to me, began the first dawn of a conscious inner life. I can still recollect with wonderful distinctness what I have thought and felt since that date, while all the preceding years are vague and shadowy as an ill-remembered dream. From them I can only conjure up, as it were, my outward form,—a happy animal existence, with which scarce a feeling of self is connected; but from the time when I bore a part in this little fragment of a romance the current of identity flows on unbroken. From that ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 1, Issue 2, December, 1857 • Various

... days and seasons passed, and Dora's serene progress continued, never checked or even flawed, there stirred within some lingerings of the old determination to "show" her; and he would conjure up a day-dream of Dora in loud lamentation, while he led the laughter of the spectators. But gradually his feelings about her came to be merely a dull oppression. He was tired of having to look at her (as he stated it) and he thanked the Lord that the time wouldn't ...
— Ramsey Milholland • Booth Tarkington


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