enchanter

noun
/ɪnˈtʃɑːntə/UK/ɪnˈt͡ʃæntɚ/US

Etymology

From Middle English enchantour, from Old French enchanteor (Modern French enchanteur), from Latin incantātor (“enchanter; spellcaster; conjurer”), from incantāre (“to sing, to consecrate with spells”). Doublet of incantator. Equivalent to enchant + -er.

  1. derived from incantātor
  2. derived from enchanteor
  3. inherited from enchantour

Definitions

  1. One who enchants or delights.

    • Robert Morse brings back to life the author, wit, bon vivant, self-pitier and true enchanter that was Truman Capote in this Tony-winning one-man performance […]
  2. A spellcaster, conjurer, wizard, sorcerer or soothsayer who specializes in enchantments.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for enchanter. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA