different between witch vs whose

witch

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: w?ch, IPA(key): /w?t?/
  • Rhymes: -?t?
  • Homophone: which (in accents with the wine-whine merger), wich, wych

Etymology 1

From Middle English wicche, from Old English wi??e (witch (female), sorceress) and wi??a (witch (male), sorcerer, warlock), deverbative from wi??ian (to practice sorcery), from Proto-Germanic *wikk?n? (compare West Frisian wikje, wikke (to foretell, warn), German Low German wicken (to soothsay), Dutch wikken, wichelen (to dowse, divine)), from Proto-Indo-European *wik-néh?-, derivation of *weyk- (to consecrate; separate); akin to Latin victima (sacrificial victim), Lithuanian vi?kas (life-force), Sanskrit ??????? (vinákti, to set apart, separate out).

Noun

witch (plural witches)

  1. A person who practices witchcraft.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:witch.
    1. (now usually particularly) A woman who is learned in and actively practices witchcraft.
  2. (derogatory) An ugly or unpleasant woman.
  3. One who exercises more-than-common power of attraction; a charming or bewitching person.
  4. One given to mischief, especially a woman or child.
  5. (geometry) A certain curve of the third order, described by Maria Agnesi under the name versiera.
  6. The stormy petrel.
  7. Any of a number of flatfish:
    1. Glyptocephalus cynoglossus (Torbay sole), found in the North Atlantic.
    2. Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis (megrim), found in the North Atlantic.
    3. Arnoglossus scapha, found near New Zealand.
  8. The Indomalayan butterfly Araotes lapithis, of the family Lycaenidae.
Synonyms
  • (person who uses magic): See Thesaurus:magician
  • (female magic user): wizardess, sorceress
  • (male magic user): wizard, sorcerer, warlock
  • (an ugly or unpleasant woman): See Thesaurus:old woman or Thesaurus:ugly woman or Thesaurus:shrew
Derived terms
Translations

Further reading

  • Arnoglossus scapha on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Arnoglossus scapha on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
  • Arnoglossus scapha on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons

Verb

witch (third-person singular simple present witches, present participle witching, simple past and past participle witched)

  1. (obsolete, intransitive) To practise witchcraft.
  2. (transitive) To bewitch.
    • 2012, Carol Berg, The Daemon Prism: A Novel of the Collegia Magica, Penguin (?ISBN)
      The little man was seething and shaking, near collapse with fear and anger. “Tell 'em, Alvy.” “A tenday ago, Will came to the Cockatoo acting crazy, so scared he'd pissed hisself. Said the sorcerer had found him in the stables and witched him.”
    • 2014, Charles L. McNichols, Crazy Weather, Counterpoint Press (?ISBN)
      “Maybe the Mormonhater witched him. There's lot of stories being told around about that old man.” “Them's lies,” denied South Boy hotly. “He may have scared Havek, but he never witched him.”
    • 2017, Benjamin R. Kracht, Kiowa Belief and Ritual, U of Nebraska Press (?ISBN), page 134:
      Sometime in 1945 he faced an opponent who apparently “witched” him, causing facial paralysis and dizzy spells that rendered him bedridden. An old Indian doctor came to his bedside, looked into his eyes, and proclaimed that he had been witched by his Seminole adversary.
  3. (intransitive) To dowse for water.
Derived terms
  • witcher

See also

References

Etymology 2

Compare wick.

Noun

witch (plural witches)

  1. A cone of paper which is placed in a vessel of lard or other fat and used as a taper.

Scots

Alternative forms

  • wutch, whitch

Etymology

From Middle English wicche, from Old English wi??e (witch (female),sorceress) and wi??a (witch (male), sorcerer) m., deverbative from wi??ian (to practice sorcery), from Proto-Germanic *wikk?n? (compare West Frisian wikje, wikke (to foretell, warn), German Low German wicken (to soothsay), Dutch wikken, wichelen (to dowse, divine)), from Proto-Indo-European *wik-néh?-, derivation of *weyk- (to consecrate; separate); akin to Latin victima (sacrificial victim), Lithuanian vi?kas (life-force), Sanskrit ??????? (vinákti, to set apart, separate out).

Noun

witch (plural witchs)

  1. witch; A person, chiefly a woman, skilled in sorcery.
    1. warlock
  2. (transferred) Various animals, insects and objects in some way associated with witches.
    1. A moth in general; a tortoiseshell butterfly.
    2. The pole flounder or dab, Glyptocephalus cynoglossus.
    3. The seaweed, Laminaria saccharina.
    4. A red clay marble, generally one that is considered effective in winning games, a “wizard”.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Verb

witch (third-person singular present, present participle witching, past witchit, past participle witchit)

  1. (transitive) To harm (a person, etc.) by means of witchcraft; to bewitch, cast a spell on.
  2. (figuratively) To affect or influence as by witchcraft.

Further reading

  • “witch” in the Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries.

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whose

English

Etymology

From Middle English whos, from Old English hwæs, from Proto-Germanic *hwes, genitive case of *hwaz (who) *hwat (what).

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) IPA(key): /hu?z/
  • Rhymes: -u?z
  • Homophones: who's, whos

Determiner

whose

  1. (interrogative) Of whom, belonging to whom.
  2. (relative) Of whom, belonging to whom.
    (= This man's dog caused the accident.)
    Venus, whose sister Serena is, won the latest championship.
  3. (relative) Of which, belonging to which.
    (= The roofs were falling off several houses that we saw.)

Translations

Pronoun

whose

  1. (interrogative) Of whom, belonging to whom.
  2. (relative, rare) Of whom, belonging to whom.
    • 1833, Tait's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 3, page 637 (Google Books view):
      If he starts it on another man's lands, and kills it there, it belongs to the owner of the land; but if he start game on one man's lands, and pursue it to those of another, and kill it there, it is neither the property of the man on whose lands it is started, nor of him on whose it is killed, but belongs to the killer.
    • 1895, Library Journal, Volume 20, page 397 (Google Books view):
      The notes on authors are extremely brilliant and incisive, not always in good perspective and sometimes freaky in their wit, as, for instance, the reference to Mrs. Holmes, of whose books it is said, "The secret of their long popularity has never been divulged by their readers," and Mrs. Harris, of whose it is said, "To a lively mind they should be conducive of profound sleep," which, whatever its faults, is by no means true of "Rutledge."

Translations

Anagrams

  • Howes, Howse, howes, showe, whoes

whose From the web:

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  • what whose line is it anyway online
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