Tarot is a see also of gypsycraft.
As nouns the difference between tarot and gypsycraft
is that tarot is tarot while gypsycraft is the practice(s) of gypsy magic, sorcery, or the use supernatural powers to influence or predict events.
tarot
Noun
(
en noun)
(singular or plural) A card game played in various different variations.
Any of the set of 78 playing cards (divided into five suits, including one of permanent trumps), often used for mystical divination.
Quotations
* 1987, Hans Hahn, “Logic, Mathematics, and Knowledge,” in Unified Science, Brian McGuiness ed.
*: [...] it is not that I cannot convince him, but that I must refuse to go on talking with him, just as I shall refuse to go on playing tarot with a partner who insists on taking my fool with the moon.
* 1996, Jan Potocki, The Manuscript Found in Saragossa [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&vid=ISBN0140445803&id=lRbXDsA9u4AC&pg=PA333&lpg=PA333&sig=s0cNY_83AgaK_TWOEA1qpv95tuQ]
*: They took me to her and then we all came back to the portal, where we started playing tarot .
*: As we were engrossed in this game, which requires quite a lot of attention, a well-dressed man appeared and seemed to examine us all closely, first one then another.
* 2001, Donald Davidson, Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&vid=ISBN0199246297&id=hGm9Dj5OmF8C&pg=PA265&lpg=PA265&sig=rjtFvOxVBgk1cro3fLQ5bLn9Eqw]
*: In explaining what it is to play tarot we could not leave out of account the rules that define the game; [...]
Anagrams
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gypsycraft
English
Noun
(en-noun)
The practice(s) of gypsy magic, sorcery, or the use supernatural powers to influence or predict events.