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Etymologies
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Examples
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It is obvious from the above that even though the Chronography is very concise, the word egregor is rather extensively used in its context.
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As I have mentioned before, the word egregor simply latched itself on to my mind in a truly occult fashion.
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I found the word egregor at the Intermediate Greek - English Lexicon, founded upon the seventh edition of Liddell and Scott's Greek-English Lexicon, with reference to As I turned to egeiro (Root EGER
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An 'egregor' (or 'egregore') is not a word one would find in a dictionary or on the internet.
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Whatever, if they got it our of their system, I'm happy for them, and I hope they have appeased their egregor.
catpewk Diary Entry catpewk 2003
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Whatever, if they got it our of their system, I'm happy for them, and I hope they have appeased their egregor.
catpewk Diary Entry catpewk 2003
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An egregor is an angel, sometimes called watcher; in Hebrew the word is ir, and the concept appears in The Book of Enoch, edited by Charles (that would be 1 Enoch).
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The modern definitions treat the egregor as a miniscule biological program, i.e. something that is in a sense alive.
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Further on in his article he relates the egregor to the Kabbalistic Adam Kadmon ( "that collective giant"), to the "Anakim in the Bible," and generally speaking to natural powers operating the world and to their analogies as they have been expressed in myths in various cultures.
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Now that we know that a Watcher is an egregor, and that an egregor is an "eir
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