My grandma believed the old superstition that putting up an umbrella inside the house is bad luck. The belief that eating bread crusts leads to curly hair is a silly superstition. She believes that Friday the thirteenth brings bad luck, but I think it's a ridiculous superstition.
The word superstition is in the dictionary.
They turned to superstition as well as religion to explain away the causes.
hi im se
I've heard of a superstition that mermaids are real and that they kill marine animals for food.
"That's an old wives tale, nothing more then a superstition!" This could be one, hope it helped.
The word superstition is normally a noun. For instance, in the sentence "Molly has a superstition about black cats," the word is a noun. You could also say "Molly has a superstitious fear of black cats," where "superstitious" is an adjective describing the word fear. The only case I can think of where superstition would be an adjective would be something where you were talking about the Superstition Mountains in Arizona.
Superstition has it that a black cat crossing your path is an omen of ill fortune.
The superstition of "good luck".
The singular nouns in the sentence are:typesuperstitionbeliefactionaction
i know a person who has a superstition about black cats, she thinks they are bad luckexamples of superstitions:it's bad luck to walk under a ladderyou get 7 years bad luck if you break a mirrorhorse shoes are good luckfour leaf clovers are good luckthrowing salt over your right shoulder is good luckA sentence could be:My friend has a superstition about mirrors, if they crack they give you bad luck.
it depends what the superstition is, superstition itself is a feeling, something of the mind.
SUPERSTITION SUPERSTITION