diabolist


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Synonyms for diabolist

an adherent of Satan or Satanism

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
of the Diabolist, a feature Chesterton gave to Gregory in Thursday, to
Millhauser, in correspondence with Howe, confirmed that Edmund Moorash is "entirely an invention," as are the contemporaneous Phantasmacist (which the catalog's narrator dryly calls "a minor and short-lived school" [181]) and Diabolist movements.
The idea of a lady needing her beauty sleep was apparently enough to dissuade even the most committed diabolist and Dulcie was able to continue her long career unsacrificed.
Baron Stock, for example, tells stories, wild stories, of how Mervyn Hogarth, whom he imagines to be "a raging diabolist," regularly celebrates the Black Mass, and even magically transforms himself on occasion into a black dog (158, 165).
Williams-Ellis's condemnation of speculators is made in language that reminds us of "The Villa Jones": "Pure and whole-hearted diabolists are as rare in aesthetics as in morals, but that there are those who will still defy their consciences for the sake of personal gain--in any place and at any time--is incontestable" (19).
Eskimo diabolists." It appears that Cthulhu's worshippers across the globe want to call him up; they also want his return to be unexpected (pp.
Baudelaire first appears in Degeneration as a degenerate exhibiting the symptoms characteristic of the Parnassians and Diabolists (pp.
Following this trickle of thought, Hostel bluntly allegorizes the displacement of American guilt onto those irritating snots in Europe, and the diabolists are conveniently located in the seeming terrain vague of the former Eastern Bloc.