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Answer for the clue "Telling fortunes by lines on the palm of the hand ", 10 letters:
chiromancy

Alternative clues for the word chiromancy

Word definitions for chiromancy in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Chiromancy \Chi"ro*mancy\, n. [Gr. chei`r hand + -mancy.] The art or practice of foretelling events, or of telling the fortunes or the disposition of persons by inspecting the hand; palmistry.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. telling fortunes by lines on the palm of the hand [syn: palmistry , palm reading , chirology ]

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. Divination performed by examining the lines in the palms.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"divination by the hand, palmistry," 1520s, from French chiromancie (14c.), from Medieval Latin chiromantia , from Late Greek kheiromanteia , from kheiro- , comb. form of kheir "hand" (see chiro- ) + -mantia (see -mancy ). Related: Chiromancer ; chiromantic ...

Usage examples of chiromancy.

True, among these sundry things he would indeed have been able to find some newly published books, but not scientific, but rather antiscientific in character: books on astrology, chiromancy, occultism, black magic and witchcraft, and so on, which would have led him to the conclusion that civilization is dead, and the mankind has been thrown back into the Dark Ages.

Some days later I saw that same smile again, but more hidden, and ambiguously veiled: at supper, Polemo, who dabbled in chiromancy, wished to examine the hand of the youth, that palm which alarmed even me by its astonishing fall of stars.

We think of palmistry or chiromancy as belonging to the days of Albertus Magnus, or, if existing in our time, as given over to the gypsies.

Of more merit were those methods classed as divination, in which signs were scried in the client's physiognomy, as in metascopy or chiromancy, or in the landscape, or in dust cast on a mirror (Syle said that gold was best, but the finings of any metal were better than ordinary dust or the husks of rice grains used by village witches).