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n.
ink
ETYMOLOGY:
[Middle English inke,
from Old French enque,
from Late Latin encaustum,
purple ink, from Greek enkauston,
painted in encaustic from enkaiein,
to paint in encaustic, burn in]
n.
ink
A pigmented liquid or paste used especially for
writing or printing.
n.
mag·ic
ETYMOLOGY:
[Middle English magik,
from Old French magique,
from Late Latin magica,
from Latin magic
, from Greek magik
, from feminine of magikos,
of the Magi, magical, from magos,
magician, magus.]
n.
mag·ic
A mysterious quality of enchantment.
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