magyckal
English
Etymology
Adjective
magyckal (comparative more magyckal, superlative most magyckal)
- (uncommon) Alternative spelling of magickal.
- 1997 July 20, Lord Drake and Kytheriea, “Plagarism[sic] Within the Pagan Community”, in soc.religion.paganism[1] (Usenet), retrieved 18 April 2022:
- Some of the stolen excerpts on the FAQ include such sayings which are particular to certain families. One such saying which was plagarized[sic] comes from a specific magyckal tradition, this being, "The whole of the action is the sum of its consequence." Special permisions[sic] were received for the use of this and other such quotes within the Traditional Witchcraft FAQ that I wrote.
- 2013, Sandra Cointreau, Energy Healing for Animals and Their Owners[3]:
- In ancient magyckal craft and present day Wicca, an intention may be written as an affirmation structured in poetic form.
- (uncommon, sometimes humorous) Alternative spelling of magical.
- 2021, Sue Buttermark, Confessions of A Faerie Princess: Sorcery School Summer[6]:
- "Tis precisely what I think happened," Elyzabeth told them. "and even though the self-styled witches had no magyckal powers, I ken they bound Eustacia to a promise to use her's[sic] for the good of the coven."