occultist|occultists in English

noun

[oc·cult·ist || ɑ'kʌltɪst /ɒ'kʌltɪst ,ə'kʌltɪst]

mystic, cabalist, supernaturalist; one who deals with the occult

Use "occultist|occultists" in a sentence

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

1. Occultists and some clairvoyants claim that this is the astral body.

2. To offer such intercession is considered at least a presumption and at worst occultist, using the magic of candles.

3. The true occultist is acquainted with no single problem that esoteric science is unable to solve, if approached in the right direction."

4. Prophet Isa El-Buba was a former Islamic occultist, who served the queen of heaven from his childhood as a dedicated child

5. The Freemasons in Paris adopted it in 1780, and occultists and Nazis re-discovered the Cistercian numeral system in the early 20th century

6. A premise of the story is that occultist Enochiana (of which Crowley was a key transmitter) is a corruption of Aeonist lore, so of course she'd view him that way

7. Black Witch Coven offers serious magickal advice, education, and free spells for Witches, and practitioners of the LHP, Black Magic, Chaos Magic, Hoodoo, Blood Magick, Ceremonial Magic, and general occultists.

8. There is an opinion among some occultists and academics that demon Beelzebub is synonymous with demon Baal/Bael, both demons presumably originating from ancient Phoenician deities with a similar name and status.

9. But when its opponents try "to wrench the formation of Kosmos... from Spirit, and attribute all to blind matter, that the Occultists claim the right to dispute and call in question their theories."

10. Alarumed by his sentinel the wolf.” (I, ii, 51-23) The nocturnal creatures in these lines are associated with supernatural and night as well as the occultist rituals that typically will take place after midnight, when “o’er the one half-world nature seems dead”

11. Awash in a Sea of Faith ranges from popular piety to magic, from anxious revolutionary war chaplains to the cool rationalism of James Madison, from divining rods and seer stones to Anglican and Unitarian elites, and from Virginia Anglican occultists and Presbyterians raised from the dead to Jonathan Edwards, Joseph Smith, and Abraham Lincoln