Associations to the word «Occult»
Noun
- Hubbard
- Vampire
- Religious
- Sun
- Werewolf
- Mentality
- Potency
- Conspiracy
- Cauldron
- Crime
- Fraternity
- Secret
- Osman
- Seer
- Hartmann
- Shadow
- Rudolf
- Meditation
- Doctrine
- Rune
- Ultrasound
- Constantine
- Investigator
- Detecting
- Believer
- Jung
- Blackwood
- Psychoanalysis
- Allegory
- Imagery
- Modernity
- Detective
- Fracture
- Ley
- Attainment
- Faust
- Pathology
- Shape
- Enlightenment
- Yates
- Fraud
- Earth
- Mri
- Trance
- Vertigo
- Testing
- Symbol
- Dawn
- Byzantium
- Helena
- Speculation
- Mastery
- Rebirth
- Connotation
- Ideology
- Cancer
- Lesion
- Tibet
- Sphinx
- Bowel
- Fondness
- Hemorrhage
- Power
- Mythology
- Philosopher
- Sect
- Tower
- Gardner
- Compendium
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
OCCULT, verb. (transitive) (astronomy) To cover or hide from view.
OCCULT, verb. (transitive) (rare) To dissimulate, conceal, or obfuscate.
OCCULT, adjective. (medicine) Secret; hidden from general knowledge; undetected.
OCCULT, adjective. Related to the occult; pertaining to mysticism, magic, or astrology.
OCCULT, adjective. Esoteric.
OCCULT, noun. (usually with the) Supernatural affairs.
OCCULT LINE, noun. A line drawn as a part of the construction of a geometrical figure or problem, but not to appear in the finished plan.
OCCULT LINES, noun. Plural of occult line
Dictionary definition
OCCULT, noun. Supernatural forces and events and beings collectively; "She doesn't believe in the supernatural".
OCCULT, noun. Supernatural practices and techniques; "he is a student of the occult".
OCCULT, verb. Cause an eclipse of (a celestial body) by intervention; "The Sun eclipses the moon today"; "Planets and stars often are occulted by other celestial bodies".
OCCULT, verb. Become concealed or hidden from view or have its light extinguished; "The beam of light occults every so often".
OCCULT, verb. Hide from view; "The lids were occulting her eyes".
OCCULT, adjective. Hidden and difficult to see; "an occult fracture"; "occult blood in the stool".
OCCULT, adjective. Having an import not apparent to the senses nor obvious to the intelligence; beyond ordinary understanding; "mysterious symbols"; "the mystical style of Blake"; "occult lore"; "the secret learning of the ancients".
Wise words
Words are but symbols for the relations of things to one
another and to us; nowhere do they touch upon absolute
truth.