mystic 1 of 2

Definition of mysticnext
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mystic

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noun

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of mystic
Adjective
The Dera was founded in 1948 by the mystic Mastana Balochistani in the Haryana city of Sirsa, near the northern state’s borders with Punjab, India’s breadbasket, and the desert state of Rajasthan. Rhea Mogul, CNN Money, 6 Feb. 2026 From early January through Fat Tuesday, Mobile comes alive with weeks of parades, masked balls, royal coronations, and the delightfully quirky rituals of its mystic societies (similar to NOLA’s parade-throwing krewes). Ellen Carpenter, AFAR Media, 15 Jan. 2026
Noun
In 1976, Barks encountered the 13th century Sufi mystic and poet Jalāl al-Dīn Muḥammad Rūmī, who would change his life and alter his career. Rebecca McCarthy, AJC.com, 28 Feb. 2026 The backstory Founded in 1941 by British mystic Edwin John Dingle—better known as Ding Le Mei—the Mentalphysics Spiritual Teaching and Retreat Center was conceived as a sanctuary for spiritual inquiry and mental well-being. Condé Nast, Condé Nast Traveler, 20 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for mystic
Recent Examples of Synonyms for mystic
Adjective
  • Volunteers organized the supplies — toothbrushes, baby wipes, instant soup and many other items — and loaded them into boxes, drawing hearts on the outside with magic marker.
    David Zahniser, Los Angeles Times, 29 June 2026
  • Skubal was last seen yelling profanities at magic wander Mike Vasil but would nevertheless fit in well in the Sox clubhouse and give Sox fans reason to believe this team can do something in October.
    Paul Sullivan, Chicago Tribune, 28 June 2026
Adjective
  • Translation is a very mysterious thing because my goal is to create something that’s deeply equivalent but uses zero of the same words.
    Jason P. Frank, Vulture, 23 June 2026
  • That is until their husbands are killed under mysterious circumstances in the USSR, and the pair become CIA operatives.
    Joe Otterson, Variety, 23 June 2026
Adjective
  • Rubio met with Gulf Arab leaders in Bahrain on Thursday in an effort to assuage their concerns over certain terms of the MOU, including the ambiguous language around the management of the Strait of Hormuz.
    Miranda Jeyaretnam, Time, 26 June 2026
  • With one, everything the best-performing agent learns is written into a layer for the next—how to handle a difficult customer, which exception patterns resolved cleanly, what an ambiguous edge case meant for the business.
    Sarah Elk, Forbes.com, 26 June 2026
Noun
  • Back in the ’90s, videos about computer chips and global warming serve as oracles.
    Sam Bodrojan, IndieWire, 17 June 2026
  • There’s a moment inside Nick Doyle’s new show at Perrotin when his AI oracle Ava stops feeling like a gimmick and starts sounding uncomfortably familiar.
    Daniel Cassady, ARTnews.com, 26 May 2026
Adjective
  • Dusty navy blue and shiny gold accents make this collection's decor feel even more magical.
    Sophia Beams, Better Homes & Gardens, 25 June 2026
  • For over 40 years now, Canadian filmmaker Guy Maddin has made some of the strangest, most beautiful movies in existence, films that replicate the magical qualities of cinema in its infancy, both paying tribute to Maddin’s influences and wryly satirizing them.
    Jim Hemphill, IndieWire, 25 June 2026
Adjective
  • His doctors speculated his infection might have been a rare case of cryptic transmission from sharing meals and bathrooms with his coworkers, one of whom apparently had a tapeworm infection.
    Beth Mole, ArsTechnica, 26 June 2026
  • The Drama stirred debate on social media over its cryptic marketing campaign that did not directly divulge the main focus of the film.
    Ryan Gajewski, HollywoodReporter, 23 June 2026
Adjective
  • The top-of-the-line chef’s kitchen sports metallic cabinetry paired with dark marble countertops and backsplashes.
    Tori Latham, Robb Report, 30 June 2026
  • These include rolled or folded leaf blades, a dark or blue tinge to the foliage, or lingering footprints after walking on the lawn.
    Kim Toscano, Southern Living, 29 June 2026
Noun
  • Post-Homeric legends relate that after returning to Ithaca Odysseus traveled to northern Greece to appease Poseidon, having descended to the underworld in the Odyssey to consult the seer Tiresias on the manner of expiation.
    Gitanjali Roy, Encyclopedia Britannica, 12 June 2026
  • Laqueur’s book dwells on the way that canines often function in art—as seers of things that people miss.
    Boris Kachka, The Atlantic, 5 June 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Mystic.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/mystic. Accessed 3 Jul. 2026.

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