mage |
a sorcerer or magician; magus. |
magenta |
a purplish red color. [3 definitions] |
maggot |
the sluglike larva of the fly and many other insects. [2 definitions] |
Magi |
according to the New Testament, the three wise men from the East who followed a brilliant star to find the infant Jesus Christ and honor him with gifts. [2 definitions] |
magic |
supernatural control of physical forces or events, as by spells or ritual actions. [6 definitions] |
magical |
mysterious and charming. [2 definitions] |
magician |
one skilled in magic, or one who performs tricks of illusion for entertainment. [2 definitions] |
magic lantern |
an instrument formerly used to project and enlarge photographic slides. |
magisterial |
of the nature of an intellectual master or authority such as a professor or scholar. [2 definitions] |
magistracy |
the office, term, or jurisdiction of a magistrate. [2 definitions] |
magistrate |
a public official who exercises a judicial or executive function, such as a mayor or justice of the peace. |
maglev |
a high-speed train levitated and propelled over tracks by the interaction of magnets along the sides of a guideway and on the train's underside; magnetic levitation train. |
magma |
the hot, liquefied rock beneath the earth's surface that rises to the top of a volcano. [2 definitions] |
Magna Carta |
the document forced from King John of England in 1215, which granted personal and political liberties to the English people. [2 definitions] |
magna cum laude |
with high honors or great praise, indicating second highest status upon graduation from a college or university. (Cf. cum laude, summa cum laude.) |
magnanimity |
generosity or willingness to forgive. |
magnanimous |
having or showing a generous, forgiving, or noble nature. |
magnate |
someone of exceptional power, wealth, or influence, esp. in business. |
magnesia |
a white, powdery oxide of magnesium, used esp. in medicine as a laxative or antacid. (See milk of magnesia.) |
magnesium |
a highly reactive chemical element of the alkaline-earth group that has twelve protons in each nucleus and that occurs naturally only in compounds, but that can be isolated as a divalent ion essential in plant and animal nutrition, or as alight, ductile, silver-white solid that bursts into a bright flame when heated above room temperature, used for flares, fireworks, and the like. (symbol: Mg) |
magnet |
an object that attracts iron and some other materials by virtue of a natural or induced force field surrounding it. (See electromagnet.) [2 definitions] |