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druidic

[droo-id-ik]

adjective

  1. of or relating to the Druids or druidism.



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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.

For two millennia there are records of the Irish trading, settling, and inter-marrying in Britain; they shared a common language with western Scotland and the Isle of Man, and a Druidic culture with the rest of Britain.

Read more on BBC

“The Zone of Interest” opens on a pitch-black screen and a blast of Mica Levi’s spare, demonically intense score; we could be listening to Druidic chants in hell — chords of lush, operatic dread and terror that might seem disproportionate to the becalmed images that follow.

Read more on Los Angeles Times

Abandoned by her human parents for being a tiefling — someone of human lineage that inherited demonic traits thanks to some act by an ancestor — Doric is wary of humans, and also doesn’t quite fit in with the druidic community that has taken her in, the Emerald Enclave.

Read more on Los Angeles Times

Then it happened — Harrington, wreathed in Druidic smoke, hoisted his guitar above his head and pickaxed his instrument into the guts of the 12-foot mirror, shattering it into oblivion.

Read more on Washington Post

May tries different approaches — spiritual, intellectual, physical — and offers thoughtful if sometimes meandering meditations on topics as diverse as the meaning of Halloween; the John Donne poem “A Nocturnal upon St. Lucy’s Day”; Druidic rituals at Stonehenge during the winter solstice; the felicity of swimming off the frigid English coast at winter time; and, when insomnia has her in its grip, the history of sleep patterns.

Read more on New York Times

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Druidessdruidism