/ˈmejɡo/, [ˈmej.ɣ̞ʊ], /ˈmejɡo/
OriginAttested since 1175 (meigu). From Old Galician-Portuguese, from Latin magicus (“magical”), from Ancient Greek μαγικός (magikós). Compare Portuguese meigo, Spanish mego.
- masculinea wizard, a witch doctor
“—as palabras do meigo unha vez máis non deixaban lugar a dúbidas—.” — —once again, the wizard’s words left no room for doubt.
- masculinea person who is believed to have made a pact with the devil
“De aí xurdiu posteriormente a lenda de que fora un meigo que fixera pauto co demo para obte-las sedes de Reims, Ravena e Roma.” — From there, a legend later appeared stating that he was a warlock who made a pact with the devil in order to obtain the seats of Reims, Ravenna and Rome.
Formsmeiga(feminine) · meigos(masculine, plural) · meigas(feminine, plural) · meigos(plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0