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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



... reader what he means; in the second case, most of the touches must conceal or even contradict what he means. You are supposed to see and appreciate the smallest gestures of a good actor; but you do not see all the gestures of a conjuror, if he is a good conjuror. Hence, into the critical estimate of such works as this, there is introduced a problem, an extra perplexity, which does not exist in other cases. I mean the problem of the things commonly called blinds. Some of ...
— Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens • G. K. Chesterton

... a rich dressing-gown, a fanciful present from an admiring Marchesa, curiously embroidered with algebraic figures like a conjuror's robe, and with a skull-cap of black satin on his hive of a head, the man of gravity was seated at a huge claw-footed old table, round as the zodiac. It was covered with printer papers, files of documents, rolls of manuscript, stray bits of strange ...
— Israel Potter • Herman Melville

... the picture, I flattered myself, was selected with no little cleverness and originality. A celebrated conjuror who had recently exposed the frauds of the Davenport Brothers was at the moment creating a sensation in the town where the school was situated, and from that incident I determined to draw my inspiration. The magnitude of the design and the importance of the occasion seemed to demand ...
— The Confessions of a Caricaturist, Vol. 1 (of 2) • Harry Furniss

... to Nice the next day; and that evening the de Vignolles had gone down to the Casino and Vera hadn't gone. It would have been all right if the children had not been allowed to sit up to see the conjuror conjuring in the lounge. But they had sat up; and that had brought it to ten o'clock before he had Vera for a ...
— The Return of the Prodigal • May Sinclair

... and prepare the body for more muscular feats: these are calisthenic exercises. Such are being at last introduced, thanks to Dr. Lewis and others, into our common schools. At the word of command, as swiftly as a conjuror twists his puzzle-paper, these living forms are shifted from one odd resemblance to another, at which it is quite lawful to laugh, especially if those laugh who win. A series of windmills,—a group of inflated balloons,—a flock of geese all asleep on one ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 7, Issue 41, March, 1861 • Various


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