Conjuring in a sentence as a noun

This is mostly a bunch of conjuring of ominous fantasies.

Rather than conjuring up this strawman, maybe you should just reply to the one single comment that even comes close to the stance you are describing.

Your comments hit it exactly, conjuring something from nothing takes amazing talent.

I'm guilty of conjuring up a regex to scrape image links every now and thenAny idea how to supersede that temptation?

But neither the Bush nor Obama administrations have have had to perform any legal conjuring tricks to derive this authority.

Instead, we have politicians conjuring up the image of imminent terrorist attacks and national security.

"The result of this, of course, will be skeptics conjuring up their own litmus tests for what constitutes a "deep" relationship in a way that the author's examples fall outside of that definition.

I'm guilty of conjuring up a regex to scrape image links every now and then, but you should really only do that when your domain of expected input data is far more restricted than the actual CFG that you're dealing with.

I'm pretty sure a bunch of old realms having long time land disputes and family feuds and ethnic disavowals for over a thousand years is different from an industrial military complex that keeps conjuring up wars for oil and to keep itself well-oiled, and worse yet stirs its fat finger in the world's cup in the name of self-righteous capitalism.

He simply said: "this is a poorly written bill, so much so that it is obviously not going to get passed, so obviously that Senator Paul had to have either known that or be incompetent, and let's stipulate that he's not incompetent".Can you address your comment to his actual point, rather than conjuring up some authoritarian demon that shoots drones armed with Wikileaks-seeking missles out of its butt?

Conjuring definitions

noun

calling up a spirit or devil

See also: conjuration conjury invocation