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 | | I also found the translation of "binder" for warlock of interest, as this would seem to relate directly to the term's usage within the Alexandrian Book of Shadows, here being used as a reference to both the action and the role of that person who does the binding of the applicant during the initiation rite. |
 | | According to the Oxford English Dictionary (1989), the word "Warlock" is derived from the Old English Waerloga which, in turn, is a compound of two words: waer (truth, agreement) and loga (liar, deceiver), from the verb leogan (to lie). |
 | | A Warlock is also used to mean a cairn or pile of stones (in Scandinavian regions) which apparently served as beacons (lighthouses) or as markers of territory. |
| www.ladyoftheearth.com /witch/warlock.txt (3449 words) |
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