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Showing results for enchantress. Search instead for enchantres.
Definitions

enchantress

[en-chan-tris, -chahn-] / ɛnˈtʃæn trɪs, -ˈtʃɑn- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The playwright first directed Pagett at the National in 1983 as Helen, the provocative enchantress in The Trojan War Will Not Take Place.

From BBC

Another is Ada Lovelace, daughter of "bad boy" Romantic poet Lord Byron, who was known as "the enchantress of numbers".

From BBC

Phoebe mostly holds power over Will, the wounded enchantress who receives his love.

From New York Times

This soapy enchantress was hands down the most beautiful woman I’d ever seen.

From The Wall Street Journal

And her presentation of her character’s emotion was so unvaried that the transition from insouciant enchantress to abandoned lover — which represents the work’s main dramatic motor — never quite came into focus.

From Washington Post