تعريف familiar في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- Inappropriately intimate or friendly
Don’t be familiar with me, boy!.
- Of or pertaining to a family; familial
- A close friend
a friend of mine, that finding a receipt in Brassavola, would needs take hellebore in substance, and try it on his own person; but had not some of his familiars come to visit him by chance, he had by his indiscretion hazarded himself; many such I have observed.
- Intimate or friendly
We are not on familiar terms.
- A member of one's family or household
- An attendant spirit often in animal form
The witch’s familiar was a black cat.
- Known to one
There’s a familiar face.
- Acquainted
I'm not familiar with this system.
- {n} an intimate acquaintance, a demon
- {a} intimate, affable, free, common
- (usually followed by `with') well informed about or knowing thoroughly; "conversant with business trends"; "familiar with the complex machinery"; "he was familiar with those roads"
- Some form of animal which has a strong psychic links with a Witch This animal is treated as a magickal partner, and believed to lend energy and insight to the magickal user It was at one time believed to be an incarnated portion of the soul of the person who had the creature
- having mutual interests or affections; of established friendship; "on familiar terms"; "pretending she is on an intimate footing with those she slanders"
- a person who is frequently in the company of another; "drinking companions"; "comrades in arms"
- An animal who has a spiritual bond with a witch This animal is usually the family pet or it can be a spiritual entity created to protect the home from the astral Warlock: Warlocks are former witches who failed to follow the wiccan crede (moral code) According to The Book of Shadows, a warlock will hunt out and kill as many witches as possible Witch: A person, male or female, who follows the ways of the Wicca A witch is not evil until he or she uses their power for evil purposes Wicca: This is the alternative name for modern witchcraft The practices of the Wicca date back to ancient times and formed the term witch in "old english" Wiccan Rede: The Wiccan rede is the moral code of the witches: "An ye harm none, do what ye will" THis means that witches are allowed to do what they like as long as they harm no one
- within normal everyday experience; common and ordinary; not strange; "familiar ordinary objects found in every home"; "a familiar everyday scene"; "a familiar excuse"; "a day like any other filled with familiar duties and experiences
- a spirit (usually in animal form) that acts as an assistant to a witch or wizard
- {s} ordinary, common; skilled; close, intimate; well-known; informal; tame; domestic (Archaic)
- Characterized by, or exhibiting, the manner of an intimate friend; not formal; unconstrained; easy; accessible
- to know about a person or a thing (e g I am familiar with how to change a flat tire )
- An intimate; a companion
- Well known; well understood; common; frequent; as, a familiar illustration
- well known or easily recognized; "a familiar figure"; "familiar songs"; "familiar guests"
- An attendant demon or evil spirit
- Improperly acquainted; wrongly intimate
- If someone or something is familiar to you, you recognize them or know them well. He talked of other cultures as if they were more familiar to him than his own They are already familiar faces on our TV screens. the familiar names of long-established local firms. + familiarity fa·mili·ar·ity Tony was unnerved by the uncanny familiarity of her face
- a person attached to the household of a high official (as a pope or bishop) who renders service in return for support
- Closely acquainted or intimate, as a friend or companion; well versed in, as any subject of study; as, familiar with the Scriptures
- Of or pertaining to a family; domestic
- disapproval If someone you do not know well behaves in a familiar way towards you, they treat you very informally in a way that you might find offensive. The driver of that taxi-cab seemed to me familiar to the point of impertinence + familiarity fa·mili·ar·ity She needed to control her surprise at the easy familiarity with which her host greeted the head waiter. + familiarly fa·mili·ar·ly `Gerald, isn't it?' I began familiarly. a cat or other animal that lives with a witch and has magical powers
- An animal, such as a pet, a Nature Spirit, or a magickal creature that aids and protects a Witch Cats are commonly associated with Witches as familiars
- a spirit (usually in animal form) that acts as an assistant to a witch or wizard a person attached to the household of a high official (as a pope or bishop) who renders service in return for support having mutual interests or affections; of established friendship; "on familiar terms"; "pretending she is on an intimate footing with those she slanders"
- If you are familiar with something, you know or understand it well. Lesinko is quite familiar with Central Television. He worked there for 25 years + familiarity fa·mili·ar·ity The enemy would always have the advantage of familiarity with the rugged terrain
- {i} good friend, acquaintance; member of the household of a pope or bishop; officer of the Inquisition; demon or evil spirit who comes when summoned
- An animal [either mortal or on the astral plane] which enhances a Witches magical workings Familiars are also attributed to do tasks for Witches, but I don't know many familiars who do anything besides help out with raising energy during a rite Traditionally, cats were most commonly associated as being a Witches familiar, which is why cats were often seen as bad luck in Europe around the early 1800s [massive slaughters of cats around that time led to a rise in the rat population wihch was the cause of the spread of the bubonic plague, more commonly known as the Black Plague]
- A spirit or guardian who is close to a human being and considered a companion in magick The spirit often manifests itself in a sacred object or a pet This explains the misconception that all witches have black cats, which is not necessarily true though a cat is a magickal creature and often does become a familiar
- A familiar is the name given to the particular animal identified with a craftworker The traditional witch's familiar is depicted as a cat, although in truth it could be any animal Be sure, however, to let the familiar choose you, and not try to impose your will by deciding which is your favourite animal, or which would hold the most prestige in your eyes
- A confidential officer employed in the service of the tribunal, especially in apprehending and imprisoning the accused
- familiar with
- having fair knowledge of; "they were acquainted"; "fully acquainted with the facts"
- Familiar.
- old
When he got drunk and quarrelsome they just gave him the old heave-ho.
- familiarity
- Informality; impertinence
Murrel did not in the least object to being called a monkey, yet he always felt a slight distaste when Julian Archer called him one. It had to do with a fine shade between familiarity and intimacy which men like Murrel are never ready to disregard, however ready they may be to black their faces.
- familiarity
- An instance of familiar behaviour
- familiarity
- {n} intimacy, easy intercourse
- familiarly
- {a} intimately, without formality
- ring a familiar bell
- (deyim) [for something] to cause someone to remember something or for it to seem familiar
- Familiarity
- familiarness
- be familiar with
- knows one's way around an issue, be well-versed at, be an expert on/at
- being familiar with
- being acquainted with, being conversant with, being versed in, being aware of, being no stranger to
- familiarities
- plural of familiarity
- familiarity
- Any aspect or reception between planets
- familiarity
- having enough information to be able to judge the safety or risks of an LMO It can be used to indicate ways of handling risks It is not synonymous with safety Relatively low degree of familiarity may be compensated for by appropriate management practices Familiarity can be increased as a result of a trial or experiment This increased familiarity can then form a basis for future risk assessment [BSWG/2/5: Panel of Experts on Biosafety, Cairo 1995]
- familiarity
- Undue intimacy
- familiarity
- close or warm friendship; "the absence of fences created a mysterious intimacy in which no one knew privacy"
- familiarity
- Close or habitual acquaintance with someone; recognizability
- familiarity
- Sexual intimacy
- familiarity
- The state of being familiar; intimate and frequent converse, or association; unconstrained intercourse; freedom from ceremony and constraint; intimacy; as, to live in remarkable familiarity
- familiarity
- Familiarity is used especially in the expression familiarity breeds contempt to say that if you know a person or situation very well, you can easily lose respect for that person or become careless in that situation. see also familiar
- familiarity
- an act of undue intimacy
- familiarity
- an act of undue intimacy close or warm friendship; "the absence of fences created a mysterious intimacy in which no one knew privacy" usualness by virtue of being familiar or well known
- familiarity
- level of knowledge of a brand or product
- familiarity
- in the pl
- familiarity
- The state of being extremely friendly; intimacy
- familiarity
- such actions and words as propriety and courtesy do not warrant; liberties
- familiarity
- an act of undue intimacy close or warm friendship; "the absence of fences created a mysterious intimacy in which no one knew privacy"
- familiarity
- {i} skill; friendship, intimacy; freedom, relaxed behavior; excessive friendliness
- familiarity
- a casual manner
- familiarity
- personal knowledge or information about someone or something
- familiarity
- usualness by virtue of being familiar or well known
- familiarity
- Anything said or done by one person to another unceremoniously and without constraint; esp
- familiarized
- having achieved a comfortable relationship with your environment
- familiarized
- {s} accustomed, acclimatized, habituated; made well-known, made commonplace, made ordinary (also familiarised)
- familiarized
- past of familiarize
- familiarly
- in a friendly manner
- familiarly
- in an intimately familiar manner; "Sid, as he was familiarly known by his friends, was one of the most respected and devoted members of the socialist minority group
- familiarly
- In a familiar manner}
- familiarly
- In a familiar manner
- familiarly
- If you say that something or someone is familiarly known as a particular thing or familiarly called a particular thing, you are giving the name that people use informally to refer to it. Ann Hamilton's father, familiarly known as `Dink'. in an informal or friendly way
- familiarness
- {i} state of being well-known, being renowned; relativeness; frequentness
- familiars
- Either a Witch's pet animal which has been trained to be a magickal helper, or an artificially created "elemental" which performs the same functions as the animal friend
- familiars
- plural of familiar
- familiars
- Small animals who aid a practitioner in performing magick by channelling the power, thereby yielding a greater level of effectiveness Where would a witch be without her familiar? Not all practitioners use familiars to perform magick Any small animal can be a familiar, although the cat seems to be the favorite Other popular familiars include dogs (including wolves, foxes, coyotes), birds (including both domestic and wild), small reptiles such as lizards and snakes, and, rising in popularity, ferrets So far, only Ruth has a familiar we know about: Sebo
- long-familiar
- frequently experienced; known closely or intimately; "a long-familiar face"; "a well-known voice reached her ears
- make familiar with
- go into detail; act too freely, take too much liberty
- strike a familiar chord
- sound well-known, reminding of something familiar