necromantia

From LSJ

ὁ δὲ πείσεται εἰς ἀγαθόν περ → he will obey you to his profit, he will obey you for his own good end

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

necrŏmantīa: (-ēa), ae, f., = νεκρομαντεία,
I an evoking of the dead to reveal the future, necromancy, Lact. 2, 16 init., Aug. Civ. Dei, 7, 35.—
II Necromantea Homeri, that part of the Odyssey in which Ulysses descends into the infernal regions, Plin. 35, 11, 40, § 132.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

nĕcrŏmantīa (-tēa), æ, f. (νεκρομαντεία), nécromancie : Lact. Inst. 2, 16 ; Aug. Civ. 7, 35 || évocation des ombres : Plin. 35, 132.

Latin > Chinese

necromantia, ae. f. :: 以亡人問卜法

Translations

necromancy

Arabic: نِكْرُومَانْسِيَّة‎; Aramaic Jewish Babylonian: נְגִידָא‎; Basque: nekromantzia; Bulgarian: некромантия; Catalan: nigromància; Cebuano: nekromansya; Chinese Mandarin: 招魂術/招魂术, 死灵术; Czech: nekromancie; Danish: nekromanti; Dutch: dodenbezwering; Faroese: andamaning; Finnish: nekromantia; French: nécromancie; German: Totenbeschwörung, Nekromantie, Totenorakel; Greek: νεκρομαντεία; Ancient Greek: νεκρομαντεία, νεκυαγωγή, νεκυοαγωγή, νεκυομαντεία, ψυχομαντεία; Hebrew: אוֹב‎; Hungarian: nekromanta; Icelandic: andasæring; Ido: nekromancio; Indonesian: nekromansi; Irish: marbhdhraíocht; Italian: negromanzia; Japanese: ネクロマンシー; Korean: 강령술(降靈術); Latin: nigromantia, necromantia; Latvian: nekromantika; Middle English: nigromancy; Old French: nygromancie; Polish: nekromancja; Portuguese: necromancia, nigromancia; Romanian: necromanția; Russian: некромантия; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: некромантија; Latin: nekromancija; Slovak: nekromancia; Spanish: nigromancia, necromancia; Swedish: nekromanti; Tagalog: nekromansya; Turkish: nekromansi; Ukrainian: некромантія