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Etymology edit

Borrowed from Hindi जादूगर (jādūgar), from Classical Persian جَادُوگَر (jādūgar).

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Noun edit

jaadugar (plural jaadugars)

  1. (India) magician
    • 1985, Margaret R. Bhatty, Kidnapping at Birpur, page 93:
      “I've spotted the jaadugar preparing to start his act,” he said.
    • 2010, Navtej Sarna, The Exile:
      They were beautiful, those two, and young; to see them was to know the magic of that jaadugar in the heavens.
    • 2018, Mahima Nayar, Against All Odds: Psychosocial Distress and Healing among Women:
      Because a woman jaadugar saw that and did it.
    • 2021, Roshani Chokshi, The Gilded Wolves:
      That had been what the jaadugar used after all.

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