envoûter

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See also: envouter

French

Etymology

From en- + Old French volt (face, visage) (from vultus (face)) + -er. Some forms of folkish magic were practiced using wax (or other material) effigies of the face of the victim.

Pronunciation

Verb

envoûter

  1. to cast a spell, bewitch, charm, hex
    Ah çà, je suppose, dit Carhaix, qu'on n'envoûte plus les personnes avec des images de cire et des épingles, avec la « Manie » ou la « Dagyde », comme cela s'appelait, au bon vieux temps? (Huysmans, Là-bas, t. 2, 1891)
    "Ah so, I suppose," said Carhaix, "that people are no longer being bewitched with images of wax and pins, with "Manie" or "Dagyde", as it was called in those good old days?"
  2. to fascinate, captivate, entrance
    L'espace est franchi qui sépare la fantaisie à laquelle on ne croit pas de la poésie qui envoûte. (Brasillach, Corneille, 1938)
    The space is so covered that separates fantasy, that we do not believe in poetry that captivates.

Conjugation

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Further reading

Anagrams