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 alluring [ə'lʊrɪŋ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 吸引人的, 诱人的, 迷人的

  1. I had seen photographs of women that streamlined their shapes and made them look so alluring that you knew it was all a trick, that once the spell was broken, and they moved, you would see that they were just ordinary women.
    我见过有些女人的照片。她们使自己的身体呈流线型,看上去如此迷人,明摆着是唬人的。这层魔障一旦被打破,她们一走起来,就能看出她们也不过是些寻常女子。
  2. They spent money allured by the tempter of advertisements.
    在广告的诱惑下他们花了钱。
  3. But last October, an alluring alternative came to light.
    哪里知道,另一个诱人的解释居然在2004年10月问世。


alluring
[ adj ]
highly attractive and able to arouse hope or desire
<adj.all>
an alluring prospecther alluring smile
the voice was low and beguiling
difficult to say no to an enticing advertisement
a tempting invitation


Allure \Al*lure"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Alluded}; p. pr. & vb.
n. {Alluring}.] [OF. aleurrer, alurer, fr. a (L. ad) + leurre
lure. See {Lure}.]
To attempt to draw; to tempt by a lure or bait, that is, by
the offer of some good, real or apparent; to invite by
something flattering or acceptable; to entice; to attract.

With promised joys allured them on. --Falconer.

The golden sun in splendor likest Heaven
Allured his eye. --Milton.

Syn: To attract; entice; tempt; decoy; seduce.

Usage: To {Allure}, {Entice}, {Decoy}, {Seduce}. These words
agree in the idea of acting upon the mind by some
strong controlling influence, and differ according to
the image under which is presented. They are all used
in a bad sense, except allure, which has sometimes
(though rarely) a good one. We are allured by the
prospect or offer (usually deceptive) of some future
good. We are commonly enticed into evil by appeals to
our passions. We are decoyed into danger by false
appearances or representations. We are seduced when
drawn aside from the path of rectitude. What allures
draws by gentle means; what entices leads us by
promises and persuasions; what decoys betrays us, as
it were, into a snare or net; what seduces deceives us
by artful appeals to the passions.


Alluring \Al*lur"ing\, a.
That allures; attracting; charming; tempting. --
{Al*lur"ing*ly}, adv. -- {Al*lur"ing*ness}, n.

  1. The book, published earlier this month, has already gone into a small second printing, and Simon & Schuster executives say the continuing stock-market turmoil makes its prospects alluring.
  2. Another sociologist claims Ms. Bembenek fits the role of the "femme fatale," the alluring but dangerous woman fancied in novel and movies.
  3. Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor, the alluring honey-blonde whose feisty nature and eight trips to the altar command more attention than her occasional movie career, is taking on the Beverly Hills police force.
  4. The performance of Pick, the salami producer, has provided an alluring precedent for investors.
  5. U.S. interest rates are well above those in West Germany and Japan and heading higher, making dollar-denominated investments more alluring.
  6. Colin Southgate, who became Thorn's chief executive officer earlier this month, conceded the rental business mightn't sound as alluring as some businesses which Thorn has abandoned.
  7. The idea sounds alluring enough: How would you like to buy the entire $3 billion wine and liquor business of Seagram Co. for only about $200 million?
  8. The high cost of living, frustrations over increasing work pressures, gambling, and the alluring Hollywood lifestyle were blamed as possible causes for the alleged corruption.
  9. Talisa Soto is perfectly wooden as Sanchez's _ and later Bond's _ love interest, and Carey Lowell plays an agent whose most alluring quality is the way she keeps her gun in a thigh garter.
  10. Not a very alluring prospect. But at least Lloyd's is heading in the right direction for a change. Any building society member who was dreaming of a C&G bonanza from one of the other societies will have had a cold shower of reality this week.
  11. It can never be alluring without losing its authority." But Ms. Kanter apparently thinks the review can have both allure and authority.
  12. A superb actress with an alluring voice, she vividly depicted the anguish as well as the anger of this beleaguered woman.
  13. Quite apart from the risks involved in such trading, changes expected over the next few years may make the futures market a little less alluring for Mr. Baldwin and other locals.
  14. But few other companies have shared the view that the attractions of a US listing are alluring enough to overcome the burdens of meeting US regulatory rules. What demand there has been from foreign issuers has come mainly from Latin America.
  15. But when the market catches up, we will be highly vulnerable unless we can invest.' The case for privatisation is alluring.
  16. She can look demure, like Cinderella at the ball or _ in a departure from tradition _ alluring in a strapless or off-the-shoulder dress with a low-cut neckline.
  17. The concept of a single personal telephone number, that follows the consumer from home to work and into the car, may seem alluring.
  18. The girl's sexual charm, her innocent viciousness and kittenish eagerness to have her worldly cake and eat it, and the luscious rewards of duets and solos, are as alluring for the dancer as the diamonds with which Monsieur GM buys Manon.
  19. It's an idea that Republicans and Democrats seem to agree on _ at least in principle _ and one that could prove especially alluring to a Congress seeking ways to cut federal spending.
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