Enchantment in a sentence as a noun

Then I told them that this was only a bit of enchantment which would work harm to none but my enemies.

Rather than experience points, you'll find a finite number of scrolls of enchantment to spend on items.

Ah well that is a relief .. as long as we can boot it without having to go through arcane enchantment, we can fix all of that.

It was the result of our enchantment with the computer-human interface, the CHI.

Proust's "A la recherche du temps perdu" is an enchantment, a very long river of neverending sentences.

Nabokov's "Ada or Ardor" is an enchantment, as a whole and fractally, down to each single sentence, to each single word.

I personally grew up with the knowledge that they weren't real from the beginning, and can't say I missed some sort of enchantment or anything.

I think we've moved into the post-enchantment era, where non-enchanting, ping-anxiety is king.

Anything from color balance, lens distortion to edge enchantment and smoothing is corrected in software/firmware.

The tight food supply forces you to descend, which in turn prevents you from saving scrolls of enchantment for too long because you'll need to spend them on your items to survive.

And there he reveals the biggest trick pulled on the "free world"... and it's performed over and over and over with the same resulting awe and enchantment in the magicians' subjects.

I won't say we reached consensus, but after years of related discussions quite a few of us had reached the conclusion that those weapons had some sort of enchantment making them especially dangerous and frightening to the Ringwraiths.

Enchantment definitions

noun

a feeling of great liking for something wonderful and unusual

See also: captivation enthrallment fascination

noun

a psychological state induced by (or as if induced by) a magical incantation

See also: spell trance

noun

a magical spell

See also: bewitchment