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apotropaic Meaning in Bengali



মন্দ বা দুর্ভাগ্য প্রতিরোধ ক্ষমতা থাকার





apotropaic's Usage Examples:

The act of lifting up one's skirt to display the genitals can be an apotropaic device; it can, in circumstances of war, evoke the fear of the enemy.


the helmet that is found in all five Getian helmets is their so-called “apotropaic” eyes, which could have looked out as a second set from immediately above.


In addition, there are certain apotropaic gestures or practices found in large parts of the Western world, such.


In Ancient Greece, the Gorgoneion (Greek: Γοργόνειον) was a special apotropaic amulet showing the Gorgon head, used most famously by the Olympian deities.


Amulets refer to any object which holds an apotropaic function.


Commonly made of silver, the amulet itself consists of several small apotropaic charms (some of which draw upon Christian symbolism), with each individual.


Singa is an apotropaic figure from the mythology of the Batak people of North Sumatra, Indonesia.


and apotropaic rites.


“The traditional laws of the Athenians have attributed the eighteenth as well as the nineteenth to the lustral and apotropaic rituals.


sounds of bells were believed to keep away evil spirits; compare the apotropaic role of the bell in the "bell, book, and candle" ritual of the earlier.


19th-century Serbian philologist and ethnographer, explained the traditional, apotropaic use of the name: a woman who had lost several babies in succession, would.


place went to 12-year old Sean Conley of Newark, California who missed "apotropaic".


Early Modern period, a Wolfssegen (also Wolfsegen, Wolf-Segen) was an apotropaic charm against wolves; conversely, a Wolfbann (Wolf-Bann) was a malevolent.


It is often recited as a practice of apotropaic magic to ward off jinn.


is commonly said that their purpose was to keep evil spirits away (see apotropaic magic).


associated with the traditional Jewish customs which could be understood as apotropaic: male circumcision, mezuzah and tefillin.


Birth tusks (also called magical wands or apotropaic wands) are wands for apotropaic magic (to ward off evil), mainly from the Middle Kingdom of Egypt.


Its apotropaic use is well recorded for 18th- to 19th-century folk belief in Bavaria.


touch wood (the usual phrase and action for speakers of English) is an apotropaic tradition of literally touching, tapping, or knocking on wood, or merely.



apotropaic's Meaning':

having the power to prevent evil or bad luck

Synonyms:

lucky;

Antonyms:

unlucky; unpropitious;

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