0 a woman with magic powers in stories -- heks [ masculine ]
1 a woman who is supposed to have powers of magic, usually through working with the devil. -- heks
The par t in parentheses is nonsensical, but written as if the witches were using familiar address forms with each other.
In 1570-1, however, the human subterfuge was replaced by 'a wider, more stereotypical malicious use of poisonous grease by witches ' (p. 149).
He is clear that this is not an ' ancient religion ' in the sense which most witches still claim.
The most vexing problem the witches presented was their destabilising of such terms as 'realistic' and 'fantastic', or 'fatal' and 'trivial'.
Women in textbooks are most likely to appear in traditional roles, such as a farmer, or as mythological figures, such as witches.
Secondly, there is the group of umfield sites connected with sagas about witches and, occasionally, the devil.
In every continent traditions have been recorded in which witches, although operating within set customs of their kind, do so individually and alone.
At each harvest, the total number of fruits and the number of fruits infected with witches' broom per plot were recorded.
中文繁体
女巫,巫婆, 討厭且醜陋的女人…
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女巫,巫婆, 讨厌且丑陋的女人…
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bruja, bruja [feminine, singular]…
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bruxa, feiticeira…
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魔女…
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cadı…
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sorcière [feminine], sorcière…
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bruixa…
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