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hedge wizard

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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From hedge (third-rate) + wizard (someone who uses magic). Compare hedge priest, hedge whore.

Noun

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hedge wizard (plural hedge wizards)

  1. (fantasy) An inferior wizard; a wizard of limited ability and little or no formal training.
    Hypernyms: wizard; see also Thesaurus:magician
    • 1962 October, Fritz Leiber, “The Unholy Grail”, in Fantastic, volume 10, number 11:
      There was something hysterical about the way Mouse insisted on that ‘great,’ for to the world Glavas Rho was but a hedge-wizard, no better than a Mingol necromancer with his second-sighted spotted dog or a conjurer beggar of Quarmall.
    • 1988, Mercedes Lackey, “Dragon's Teeth”, in Spell Singers, page 52:
      "And Portravus has no mage—" said mousy Herjes, looking as much frightened as worried. "Just a couple of hedge-wizards and some assorted Low Magick practitioners. And not a lot of money to spare to hire one."
    • 1990 November, Gregg Sharp, “Hedge Wizards”, in Dragon, volume 15, number 6, page 19:
      Hedge wizard” is a term that’s come up in my campaign to describe the proprietors of small “magic shops” in villages and cities in AD&D® campaigns. Hedge wizards specialize in minor but useful magicks, using spells like mending and knock rather than magic missile and irritation. Hedge wizards are usually low-level mages with sage and herbalist abilities.
    • 2002, Mike Mearls, The Quintessential Wizard, page 11:
      To the young hedge wizard, a wizard of only 5th level seems to be a mighty archmage.
    • 2016, Rowan Speedwell, Bitterwood:
      "I don't know of any great mage in the Bitterwood," Daene said. "Hedge-wizards aplenty, and weather-witches—every village has them."
    • 2020, Russell Archey, The Seven Spires:
      He talked of magic, which she found interesting. She'd never spoken to a true wizard before. Hedge wizards, perhaps, but never someone as knowledgeable and powerful as a spire wizard.
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Further reading

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