Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A thin supple rod, twig, or stick.
- noun A slender rod carried as a symbol of office in a procession; a scepter.
- noun Music A conductor's baton.
- noun A stick or baton used by a magician, conjurer, or diviner.
- noun A pipelike attachment that lengthens the handle of a device or tool.
- noun A handheld electronic device, often shaped like a rod, that is used for security purposes to detect metal.
- noun Sports A narrow slat used as an archery target.
- transitive verb To scan (a person, for example) with an electronic wand.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A slender stick; a rod.
- noun A twig; a bough.
- noun A rod, or staff having some special use or character. Specifically
- noun A rod used by conjurers or diviners.
- noun A small baton which forms part of the insignia of the messenger of a court of justice in Scotland, and which he must exhibit before executing a caption: called more fully wand of peace.
- noun The baton used by a musical con ductor.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun A small stick; a rod; a verge.
- noun A staff of authority.
- noun A rod used by conjurers, diviners, magicians, etc.
- noun (Scots Law) a wand, or staff, carried by the messenger of a court, which he breaks when deforced (that is, hindered from executing process), as a symbol of the deforcement, and protest for remedy of law.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A stick or
staff . - noun by extension An instrument shaped like a stick or staff such as a curling wand.
- noun a
magic wand . - noun A branch or stalk, especially of
willow . - noun A
suit of the minor arcana intarot , or a card of that suit. - verb transitive To
scan (e.g. a passenger at an airport) with ametal detector .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a thin tapered rod used by a conductor to lead an orchestra or choir
- noun a ceremonial or emblematic staff
- noun a thin supple twig or rod
- noun a rod used by a magician or water diviner
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Letters after a name do not modify character, they are there to confuse the letterless ones, just like a magicians wand is used, to get the hoi polloi [gnu] looking the other way while getting sheered.
Lift The Stone Just A Little Bit Higher and………… « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG Inspector Gadget 2009
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Something tells me that if Bowman hooked one of these bad boys there's nothing a wimpy little fairy wand is gonna do.
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The manufacturer says the wand is powered by static electricity generated when its user marches in place while holding the instrument straight ahead.
Iraq confirms that bomb-sniffing devices don't work Ernesto Londono 2010
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The manufacturer says the wand is powered by static electricity generated when its user marches in place while holding the instrument straight ahead.
Iraq confirms that bomb-sniffing devices don't work Ernesto Londono 2010
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Something tells me that if Bowman hooked one of these bad boys there's nothing a wimpy little fairy wand is gonna do.
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His wand is rocking a light charm in the pic ... "brighten your morning" ... see where I'm going with this?
Here’s The New ‘Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows’ Still In Full Size » MTV Movies Blog 2009
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I was merely pointing out that the visual of the design fairy with her magical wand is about as ridiculous as the blind watchmaker in a puddle of goo.
All These Different Creatures are Variations of the Same Theme 2008
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So, I'm guessing the lavander wand is now safely tucked in the gentleman's sock drawer?
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Khudáwand is still used in popular as in classical Persian, and is universally understood in Hindostan.
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The wand is held vertically, a tool for the unification of heaven and earth.
Quizzage! (moi? procrastinate?) suricattus 2003
sionnach commented on the word wand
German for 'wall' (internal, rather than external).
January 9, 2008