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Definitions

mantic

[man-tik] / ˈmæn tɪk /


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.

But Miss du Maurier's latest novel lacks the suspense, pageantry and ro mantic insight of Rebecca, French man's Creek or even the recent best-selling House on the Strand.

From Time Magazine Archive

Most of his poems are personal�neither jeweled cenotaph nor mantic dispatches from a muse, but gifts of self.

From Time Magazine Archive

In a bouncy, daffy, ro mantic Little Old New York musical Matchmaker Carol Channing juggles lonely hearts and sassily wangles one fo herself.

From Time Magazine Archive

Like the British picture, September Affair tells a wistfully ro mantic story of a couple thrown together into what readers of women's-magazine fiction know as a love that can never be.

From Time Magazine Archive

The "glossolaly" was inarticulate and unintelligible; it was a feature of Greek "mantic," an accompaniment of over-strained emotion, and even to be produced by material agencies, as Plutarch lets us see.

From The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire by Glover, T. R. (Terrot Reaveley)