enchanter in English

noun
1
a person who uses magic or sorcery, especially to put someone or something under a spell.
There were four ranks a person could be - witch or wizard, mage, enchanter or enchantress, and sorcerer or sorceress.

Use "enchanter" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "enchanter" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "enchanter", or refer to the context using the word "enchanter" in the English Dictionary.

1. Enchanter to me Chinese government officers is Enchanter, this is their advice.

2. The enchanter is very mysterious.

3. He always tells the children the stories of the enchanter.

4. Two days ago, I was got a supernatural raincoat from an enchanter.

5. Synonyms for Conjuror include illusionist, magician, conjurer, diviner, druid, elder, enchanter, enchantress, exorciser and exorcist

6. Synonyms for Charmer include magician, witch, sorcerer, necromancer, enchanter, wizard, mage, voodooist, magus and conjuror

7. NIV the captain of fifty and man of rank , the counselor , skilled craftsman and clever enchanter.

8. The second surprise had been accomplished for Jeanie Deans by the rod of the same enchanter.

9. A magic-wielding character of immense power, the Great Enchanter lived for untold centuries.

10. Synonyms for Augurer include sorcerer, enchanter, magician, magus, necromancer, witch, wizard, mage, voodooist and warlock

11. Knights of Ni, we are but simple travelers who seek the enchanter who lives beyond these woods.

12. He might have known the Great Enchanter personally, and will almost certainly covet some of Drachenfels' magical possessions.

13. Elf Enchanter: Arousing Anima is a visual novel game where you play as Roy the mage

14. They have forgotten who they are, knowing only that they have been trapped by an evil enchanter.

15. Conjurer Meaning: "an enchanter, a magician," from Anglo-French conjurour, Old French conjureur "Conjurer, magician,… See definitions of Conjurer.

16. The Hebrew word ʼash·shaphʹ (Aramaic, ʼa·shaphʹ; rendered “astrologers,” KJ) is properly defined “Conjurer, necromancer, enchanter.”(A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament, by Brown, Driver, and Briggs, 1980, pp

17. Would the Blandishing enchanter still weave his spells around me, or should I burst them all and turn away in coldness! Master Humphrey's Clock Yet such is the prevailing paranoia that the publishing house was legitimately concerned that suddenly the little sisters of St

18. Later ones included three written by David Garrick and based on Shakespeare - The Fairies (3 February 1755 at the Drury Lane, London), after A Midsummer Night's Dream, and The Tempest (11 February 1756, Drury Lane, London) - and a successful afterpiece, The Enchanter (13 December 1760, Drury Lane, London).

19. He that is guilty of sins not to be named, . . . a magician, an enchanter, an astrologer, a diviner, an user of magic verses, . . . one that makes amulets, a charmer, a soothsayer, a fortune-teller, an observer of palmistry . . . , let these be proved for some time . . . and if they leave off those practices, let them be received; but if they will not agree to that, let them be rejected.”