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levitation

 - 3 dictionary results

lev⋅i⋅ta⋅tion

[lev-i-tey-shuhn]
–noun
1. the act or phenomenon of levitating.
2. the raising or rising of a body in air by supernatural means.

Origin:
1660–70; levitate + -ion


lev⋅i⋅ta⋅tion⋅al, adjective
lev⋅i⋅ta⋅tive, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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lev·i·tate   (lěv'ĭ-tāt')   
intr. & tr.v.   lev·i·tat·ed, lev·i·tat·ing, lev·i·tates
To rise or cause to rise into the air and float in apparent defiance of gravity.

[From Latin levis, light (on the model of gravitate); see levity.]
lev'i·ta'tion n., lev'i·ta'tion·al adj., lev'i·ta'tor n.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Encyclopedia

levitation

rising of a human body off the ground, in apparent defiance of the law of gravity. The term designates such alleged occurrences in the lives of saints and of spiritualist mediums, generally during a seance; levitation of furniture and other objects during a seance has also been reported. Levitation of witches and other figures of folklore is called transvection and is said to involve the rubbing of "flying ointment" on their bodies before flying to the sabbath (see witches' sabbath). The levitation of saints is usually directly upward, whereas that of witches has the dynamic purpose of transportation. Theologians long debated whether transvection was illusion or fact; levitation, however, has been subject to less controversy, though its practice has often been discouraged.

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Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.
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