chantment
English
Etymology
From Middle English chauntement, a clipping of enchauntement (modern English enchantment).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈtʃɑːntmənt/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈt͡ʃæntmənt/
Noun
chantment (plural chantments)
- (rare, archaic) enchantment
- 1556, Seneca, translated by Iohn Studley, THE ſeuenth Tragedie of Seneca, Entituled MEDEA […] , Thomas Colwell, act 3, page 28a:
- My lytle chyldren they ſhall beare
theſe preſentes to the Bryde,
That fyrſte wyth ſlybber ſlabbar ſoſſe
of chauntmentes ſhalbe tryed.
- 1734, Henry Fielding, Don Quixote in England […] , George Falkner, page 51:
- Truly then, Sancho, thou muſt have travelled by Chantment. I don't know whether I travelled by Chantment ; but this I know, that about Five Miles off I met my Lady Dulcinea. How ! ſays he, and gave ſuch a Spring, I thought he would have leapt over the Wall.
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