0 past simple and past participle of lull
1 to cause someone to feel calm or to feel that they want to sleep:
The unwary will be lulled into a false sense of security and happily accept a possibly wrong result.
Within these forms there are moments that are lively and even loud, but in the end the nocturne is always lulled, the lullaby hushed, and the requiem prostrate.
It is easy to allow ourselves to be lulled into a state of confident ignorance when it comes to the state of bioethics in countries other than our own.
In reality, the only virtue of the crisis is that it will wake up populations lulled by financial expectation facilities and anti-national propaganda.
No, we are, to a great extent, being lulled into a false sense of security, because the proposals are not proportionate.
The public conscience in this matter has now been lulled into the belief that conscription has to go.
We would, however, be unwise to be lulled into a false sense of security because of any action which has been taken.
They would be lulled into a sense of security that would be illusory and false.