enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cartomancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartomancy

    Forms of cartomancy appeared soon after playing cards were introduced into Europe in the 14th century. [1] Practitioners of cartomancy are generally known as cartomancers, card readers, or simply readers. Cartomancy using standard playing cards was the most popular form of providing fortune-telling card readings in the 18th, 19th, and 20th ...

  3. Category:Cartomancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Cartomancy

    Download as PDF; Printable version ... Help. Divination using cards such as standard playing cards, tarot cards, or oracle cards ... Tarot (10 C, 10 P) Pages in ...

  4. Suit of swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suit_of_swords

    This card can also indicate the stubborn adherence to an ideal. The Nine of Swords can represent being plagued by fear, guilt, doubt, and worries that are to a large extent, unfounded. However, it can indicate the process of letting go of grief and, in combination with healing cards like the Queen of Wands, it can be highly beneficial.

  5. Marie Anne Lenormand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Anne_Lenormand

    The topic of the spread is the center card on the second row and the other cards are interpreted in how they relate to or influence it. There is also the Grande Tableau ("Great Scene"), in which the whole deck is laid out in a grid of four rows of nine cards (4x9) or five rows (four rows of eight cards and the fifth row having only four cards).

  6. Major Arcana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_Arcana

    The society subsequently published Dictionnaire synonimique du livre de Thot, a book that "systematically tabulated all the possible meanings which each card could bear, when upright and reversed." [25] Following Etteilla, tarot cartomancy was moved forward by Marie-Anne Adelaid Lenormand (1768–1830) and others. [2]

  7. Suit of coins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suit_of_coins

    The suit of coins is one of the four suits used in tarot decks with Latin-suited cards.It is derived from the suit of coins in Italian and Spanish card playing packs. In occult uses of tarot, Coins is considered part of the "Minor Arcana", and may alternately be known as the suit of pentacles, though this has no basis in its original use for card games. [1]

  8. Kau chim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kau_chim

    Kau chim, kau cim, chien tung, [1] "lottery poetry" and Chinese fortune sticks are names for a fortune telling practice that originated in China in which a person poses questions and interprets answers from flat sticks inscribed with text or numerals.

  9. OH cards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OH_Cards

    OH cards are a genre of special playing cards used as story–telling prompters, counseling and psychotherapeutic tools, communication enhancers, educational aids, and social interactive games. OH cards have no official or traditional interpretations of images, and instructions included with the decks encourage imaginative and personal ...