0 to (try to) persuade or attract to do something; to make (someone) want to do (something) -- vábit
The sunshine tempted them (to go) out.
Thus is one tempted to take the journey again.
Of course, it would be tempting to suggest that the independent rights of children are being forgotten in all of this.
He was never tempted to see" bishops" as a key for locking the door on dissenters.
One is tempted to say that consent is valid if one has a right that the normative consequences will not occur without one's consent.
Consider any complex property which someone is tempted to identify with good.
If the retailer plans his customer flow carefully, he can increase sales by tempting people to buy more than they intended.
Still, tempting though it is, we should not oversimplify the issue.
At most, we may be tempted to infer the existence of'gateway communities' on the boundaries of our region.