English

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Etymology

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Ancient Greek κρόμμῠον (krómmuon, onion) +‎ -mancy

Noun

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cromniomancy (uncountable)

  1. Divination by onions or onion sprouts.
    • 1660, Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy in Brand Popular Antiquities (1844) iii.
      Burton [] speaks of "cromnysmantia," a kind of divination with onions laid on the altar at Christmas Eve, practised by girls, to know when they shall be married, and how many husbands they shall have. This appears also to have been a German custom.
    • 1931, Lock tr. de Givry, Picture Museum of Sorcery:
      cromniomancy consisted of laying onions on which certain names had been written upon the altar on Christmas Day; when these were planted the one which sprouted first would give the required indication.