Still chasing words and Terms.
Some know the Order ADF
Did Druids do real Magick?
Draíocht - One of the three primary arts, the word is used to refer to what we would now called "magick" (in both the simple and the ritual sense). It means "the use of powers to effect ends." Spell-casting, the use of evocations and invocations, the practice of chanting, circle dancing (intended to bring about a particular end) and other arts are all considered disciplines of draíocht. http://www.isisbooks.com/celtic-springs.asp
Google Translate:
Ár nDraíocht Féin > Our Own Draíocht
Féin . > Own
Ár > Our
draíocht > I like our Magic as Defination.
Etymology draoi + -acht
Noun
draíocht f
druidic art
magic, enchantment
Declension
[show ▼]Declension of draíocht
Mutation
Irish mutation
Radical Lenition Eclipsis
draíocht dhraíocht ndraíocht
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.
Ár nDraíocht Féin > Our Own Draíocht
Féin . > Own
Ár > Our
draíocht > I like our Magic as Defination.
Etymology draoi + -acht
Noun
draíocht f
druidic art
magic, enchantment
Declension
[show ▼]Declension of draíocht
Mutation
Irish mutation
Radical Lenition Eclipsis
draíocht dhraíocht ndraíocht
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.
http://dictionary.reference.com/
rad·i·cal [rad-i-kuhl] Show IPAadjective
1. of or going to the root or origin; fundamental: a radical difference.
2. thoroughgoing or extreme, especially as regards change from accepted or traditional forms: a radical change in the policy of a company.
3. favoring drastic political, economic, or social reforms: radical ideas; radical and anarchistic ideologues.
4. forming a basis or foundation.
5. existing inherently in a thing or person: radical defects of character.
6. Mathematics .
a. pertaining to or forming a root.
b. denoting or pertaining to the radical sign.
c. irrational ( def 5b ) .
7. Grammar . of or pertaining to a root.
8. Botany . of or arising from the root or the base of the stem.
le·ni·tion [li-nish-uhn] Show IPA
noun
1. Phonetics . a phonological process that weakens consonant articulation at the ends of syllables or between vowels, causing the consonant to become voiced, spirantized, or deleted.
2.Linguistics . a type of Celtic mutation that derives historically from phonological lenition.
Origin: 1535–45 for obsolete sense “mitigation, assuaging”; 1910–15 for current senses; < Latin lēnīt ( us ) (past participle of lēnīre to soften; see lenis, -ite2 ) + -ion
rad·i·cal [rad-i-kuhl] Show IPAadjective
1. of or going to the root or origin; fundamental: a radical difference.
2. thoroughgoing or extreme, especially as regards change from accepted or traditional forms: a radical change in the policy of a company.
3. favoring drastic political, economic, or social reforms: radical ideas; radical and anarchistic ideologues.
4. forming a basis or foundation.
5. existing inherently in a thing or person: radical defects of character.
6. Mathematics .
a. pertaining to or forming a root.
b. denoting or pertaining to the radical sign.
c. irrational ( def 5b ) .
7. Grammar . of or pertaining to a root.
8. Botany . of or arising from the root or the base of the stem.
le·ni·tion [li-nish-uhn] Show IPA
noun
1. Phonetics . a phonological process that weakens consonant articulation at the ends of syllables or between vowels, causing the consonant to become voiced, spirantized, or deleted.
2.Linguistics . a type of Celtic mutation that derives historically from phonological lenition.
Origin: 1535–45 for obsolete sense “mitigation, assuaging”; 1910–15 for current senses; < Latin lēnīt ( us ) (past participle of lēnīre to soften; see lenis, -ite2 ) + -ion
eclipsis
World English Dictionary
eclipsis (ɪˈklɪpsɪs) — n
1. a rare word for ellipsis
2. (in Gaelic) phonetic change of an initial consonant under the influence of a preceding word. Unvoiced plosives become voiced, while voiced plosives are changed to nasals
World English Dictionary
eclipsis (ɪˈklɪpsɪs) — n
1. a rare word for ellipsis
2. (in Gaelic) phonetic change of an initial consonant under the influence of a preceding word. Unvoiced plosives become voiced, while voiced plosives are changed to nasals
Tags: #Conjure, #Magic, #Magick, #Spell, #Curse, #Blessing
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