Lexicographical Neighbors of Encharm
Literary usage of Encharm
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, Horace Howard Furness (1913)
"Without doubt encharm'd is the right word, and, as it is also the more unusual
word, was probably changed by the printer into ..."
2. Strictures on Mr. Collier's New Edition of Shakespeare, 1858 by Alexander Dyce (1859)
"See the present volume, under Cymbeline, act iv. sc. 2. ROMEO AND JULIET. P.
107,—act i. sc. 1. "' From love's weak childish bow she lives encharm'd. ..."
3. A new dictionary of the English language by Charles Richardson (1839)
"... to deliver from delusion, from fascination ; to dis-encharm. ... DIS-encharm,* ».
To free from the influence of charm» or incantations ; to disenchant ..."