There are various terms that can be used to describe a woman who is supposed to have magic powers. She could be called a witch (in Spanish, bruja), a sorceress, an enchantress, or in New Age parlance, a psychic. If you don't believe that she actually has magic powers you could also call her a fraud or a charlatan.
Witch
MAGIC POWERS ARENT REAL. yOU HAVE TO GET HIGH AUTHORITY
It depends upon what you mean of sympathetic magic - but gods were of the spirit of elements and could call upon such powers of nature and magic.
The technical term is magician. Those with supernatural powers are wizards or sorcerors. Various religions that practice "natural magic" have men called shamans or male witches (the same term as for females).
yes,i can call my magic jack.
Not wizards in the sense of Harry Potter novels. But there are Witches and Wizards groups and societies and even call themselves by these names. These ones do not have magic powers.
Magic Johnson
There are multiple answers to this question. For example, a magician studies performance magic- magic that is not real, but instead simply an illusion. Here are more names for real magic practitioners that you might find in a fantasy themed book:Mage (this isn't very commonly used, but its defenition is: a magician)Wizard (WAY more common, but mostly someone who uses spells rather than natural powers)Witch (by the loosest defenition, witches DO practice magic, but they are very stereotyped- the defenition of witch is: a person, now especially a woman, who professes or is supposed to practice magic, especially black magic or the dark arts)Sorcerer/Sorceress (a sorcerer, very literally, is a witch that practices more conjuring than simply potions and black magic)I hope that this is helpful!
Earvin "Magic" Johnson played for the L.A. Lakers
A man that performs magic is called a magician.
Jaadu
magic
magician