esbat
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French esbat, cognate to modern ébat (“frolic”).
Noun
esbat (plural esbats)
- A Wiccan coven gathering other than one of the Sabbats. While a full moon ritual may be held during an esbat, esbats encompass coven business meetings, social occasions, and opportunities for merriment.
- 1965, Ruth E. St. Leger-Gordon, Witchcraft and Folklore of Dartmoor, page xviii. 146:
- Latter day witches, continuing the age-long cult, frequently made use of these old circles as meeting places, holding esbats, sabbats, and performing their ritual "ring" dances within the circumference of the tall granite stones.
Catalan
Verb
esbat
- inflection of esbatre:
- third-person singular present indicative
- second-person singular imperative
Old French
Etymology
From the verb esbatre.
Noun
esbat oblique singular, m (oblique plural esbaz or esbatz, nominative singular esbaz or esbatz, nominative plural esbat)
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