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spellbook

n. A book of magic spells.

Usage examples of "spellbook".

After feasting on roasted rabbit, Evaine took out her spellbook, committing a few magical incantations to memory, for each time she used a spell it was forgotten, and she was obliged to study it anew.

She placed one of her spellbooks on the top of the unfurled scroll and one at the bottom and sat down to read it.

Shal quickly grabbed her spellbooks from the desk before they, too, were caught in the magical blaze.

El blinked around at more spellbooks than he could hope to collect in a century or more of doing nothing but hunting down and seizing books of magic, and swallowed.

This was not unusual for wizards, even drow wizards accustomed to the lightless ways of the Underdark, for one could not read scrolls or spellbooks without light!

Better to die, then-save that the goblins would capture his magic and no doubt turn it over to Nalavara, all of the wands, rings, clasps, and amulets he carried hidden inside his secret pockets-not to mention the weathercloak itself, and even his tiny traveling spellbook, which relied on magic of its own to enlarge itself whenever he needed to read it.

Then, locked in their desperate fight, the couatl and the Ancestor fell slowly, following the spellbook into the flaring caldron.

He had emptied his hiding place under the loose floorboard of all food, double-checked every nook and cranny of his bedroom for forgotten spellbooks or quills, and taken down the chart on the wall counting down the days to September the first, on which he liked to cross off the days remaining until his return to Hogwarts.

He had emptied his hiding place under the loose floorboard of all food, double-checked every nook and cranny of his bedroom for forgotten spellbooks or quills, and taken down the chart on the wall counting the days down to September the first, on which he liked to cross off the days remaining until his return to Hogwarts.

Contingency magics guard those who can cast them-or afford the services of other casters-against death and calamity, and even the lowliest wizards paint impressive but powerless symbols on things and cast magic mouth spells in profusion in an attempt to cow would-be thieves into seeking safer goods to make off with, A definitive guide to all traps and wards used by mages-from the glowing but false spellbook that is the counterweight of a falling bag of boulders to the chain contingency-linked multiple meteor swarms of certain archmages' tombs that slaughter intruders in entire networks of false burial chambers--is something I doubt any mortal could pen.