To say bad things about a person's character.
That's what I wanna know
The collective noun for characters is a cast of characters.
Fascinate derives from the Latin fascinare, meaning to enchant or cast a spell.
It is painful to have aspersion made on your character by someone who was once close to you.A politician career may be ruin by a single aspersion that he or she is guilty of dishonesty or improper conduct.
It is an old fashioned term meaning a person who has one black parent and one white parent, someone who is mixed race.
Please be very careful when you cast an aspersion my way. What will be the next aspersion you cast at me?
An aspersion is an attack on the reputation. Don't cast aspersions when you might be suspected of wrongdoing yourself.
Conquer thy own evils before you judge others. Also, depends on your religion... Conquer thine own self-righteousness before you cast aspersions on others. Maybe we are talking Tinkerbell here.
it is cast of people and they are hindu
Just to make things a bit clearer here. Witch is a non-gender specific word usually associated with practitioners of one of a great number of nature based spiritual paths commonly found under the umbrella term "paganism". Wizard is a non-gender specific word usually associated with those who study the Craft but do not necessarily follow a spiritual path. As for the "stuff they cast. Like all humans they can cast a glance, cast a line, cast a play, cast aspersions, cast a broken limb, cast away, or cast adrift. They can also cast spells, but that is just a very small part of what they do.
Miles Prance has written: 'Mr. Prance's answer to Mrs. Cellier's libel, and divers other false aspersions cast upon him' 'L'Estrange a papist' 'A true narrative and discovery of several very remarkable passages relating to the horrid Popish plot' -- subject(s): Popish Plot, 1678
WC9 is cast P22.
bol/o
over cast halfway
Merchant. has written: 'Family-prayers, and moral essays, in prose and verse. By a merchant' 'Picture Books for the Literacy Hour' 'The Turkey merchants and their trade vindicated from the aspersions and unjust reproaches cast on them' 'Six years in the prisons of England' -- subject(s): Prisoners' writings, English, Prisons 'The way to be wise and wealthy; recommended to all'
deliberately and circuitously throwing aspersions and wrongful doubt upon another person in order to escape suspicion upon oneself
That's what I wanna know