Wiktionary
alt. 1 (context transitive English) to bewitch or enchant someone. 2 (context transitive English) to wrap or bind with a thrown rope. vb. 1 (context transitive English) to bewitch or enchant someone. 2 (context transitive English) to wrap or bind with a thrown rope.
Usage examples of "ensorcell".
Perhaps that wife he had taken unto himself during the years he dwelt in the Witch Kingdom had ensorcelled him.
But, ensorcelled or not, Portos resolved, ere he reached his own camp, that never again would his men suffer or his sacred honor be questioned by Zastros.
Had Ursilla somehow ensorcelled me from afar so I had overlooked so simple a thing and taken no precautions?
She walked as one who is ensorcelled, drawn to some meeting during her sleep.
The anchorage is good there, but beware of their docks where ensorcelled ships may call down curses on your own vessels of honest wood.
James struck the ensorcelled man as hard as he could across the back of the head with the flat of his sword and he crumpled to the ground, the energy around him vanishing.
The Power reflected back on him, as it will when any ensorcelling is incomplete.
He was a man that could walk soft-footed through a hall of enemies and bemaze them all, as he ensorcelled them.
He turned around, lunged to the leadstone skull-rock, and pressed tightly against it the encindered and empouched (and certainly ensorcelled!
And the two adventurers felt a yearning for these shimmer-girls such as they had never felt for mortal woman, so that they could no more turn back than men wholly ensorcelled or stark lockjawed mad.