Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • In a bewitching manner.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adverb In a bewitching manner

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • adverb in a bewitching manner

Etymologies

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Examples

  • And always in the distance, even in the heat of August, loom the bewitchingly white, snowy summits.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • And always in the distance, even in the heat of August, loom the bewitchingly white, snowy summits.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • He stood there beside her, looking down on her brown crown of hair glinting gold and bronze and bewitchingly curling into tendrils above her ears, singing a song that was fire to him — ­that must be fire to her, she being what she was and feeling what she had already, in flashes, half-unwittingly, hinted to him.

    CHAPTER XVII 2010

  • And always in the distance, even in the heat of August, loom the bewitchingly white, snowy summits.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • And always in the distance, even in the heat of August, loom the bewitchingly white, snowy summits.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • How bewitchingly beautiful Julian Bond was once, transcending race, class, gender and time with his classic appeal.

    Michael Henry Adams: The Art of the Steal: Betraying Dr. Albert Barnes and Future Generations 2010

  • It was this aspect of the novel, the hardest one to talk about because it is so subtle and yet so bewitchingly present in the gaps and corners of the narrative, that I most appreciated.

    The Mathematics of Love « Tales from the Reading Room 2008

  • This fascination with what's gone provides the impetus that drives O'Riordan's bewitchingly recherché debut.

    In the Flesh by Adam O'Riordan 2010

  • This is, she says, a "bewitchingly simple argument" but the assumption that such tourism necessarily translates into the kinds of development that benefits wildlife is far too simplistic.

    Wildlife conservation projects do more harm than good, says expert 2010

  • There's no sign of agendas in The Ogre of Oglefort by Eva Ibbotson (Macmillan £9.99), no social commentary or consciousness raising; just a wonderfully playful story about some bewitchingly strange people.

    Summer books for older children: runners and riders 2010

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