apantomancy
English
editEtymology
editFrom Ancient Greek ἀπαντάω (apantáō, “to encounter”) and μαντεία (manteía, “prophecy”).
Noun
editapantomancy (uncountable)
- Divination by chance meetings with any objects that present themselves, most commonly animals; for example, the superstition associated with a black cat crossing one's path.
- 1920, Lewis Spence, An Encyclopædia of Occultism[1]:
- Apantomancy: Divination by means of any objects which happen to present themselves. To this class belong the omens drawn from chance meetings with a hare, an eagle, etc.
- 1961, H.E. Wedeck, Treasury of Witchcraft:
- Even objects that lie about haphazardly were fit for mantic purposes. The prcatice was called apantomancy.