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Magnetism   /mˈægnətˌɪzəm/   Listen
Magnetism

noun
1.
Attraction for iron; associated with electric currents as well as magnets; characterized by fields of force.  Synonyms: magnetic attraction, magnetic force.
2.
The branch of science that studies magnetism.  Synonym: magnetics.



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"Magnetism" Quotes from Famous Books



... seniors whom he didn't like. In some, cases, especially among the enlisted men, they would appear to have been spoken for the captain's especial benefit. Devers, while a painstaking officer and not unmindful of the care of his men, was one who "lacked magnetism," to say the least, and never won from them the enthusiastic homage they often lavished on others among their superiors. The fact that Lieutenant Davies, finding Moore and Rupp actually so weak from lack ...
— Under Fire • Charles King

... charm and personal magnetism must have been a powerful factor in all that movement," said Salemina, plunging hastily back into the topic to avert any further recrimination. "I suppose we feel it even now, and if I had been alive in 1745 I should probably have made myself ridiculous. 'Old maiden ladies,' ...
— Penelope's Experiences in Scotland • Kate Douglas Wiggin

... or stage of civilization—as transcendent not in some of the virtues, but in them all—as never subject to prejudice, or the impulse of passion, never losing that perfect poise which it has been impossible for the greatest of men to achieve—as possessed of a mysterious magnetism which carried conviction to His hearers even when claiming to be one with the Infinite—as inspiring thousands with a love which has led them to give their lives for ...
— Oriental Religions and Christianity • Frank F. Ellinwood

... fluid magnetism in the rush of Jasper Ewold's junketing verbiage which carried the listener on the bosom of a pleasant stream. Jack was suddenly reminded that it must be very late and he had far overstayed the retiring hour of the desert, where the Eternal ...
— Over the Pass • Frederick Palmer

... about the company she was keeping in the East. To her these "friends" seemed in no proper sense either her friends or one another's. Drawn together from all parts of America, indeed of the world, by the magnetism of millions, they had known one another not at all or only slightly in the period of life when thorough friendships are made; even where they had been associates as children, the association had rarely been of the kind that creates friendship's ...
— The Cost • David Graham Phillips


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