0 past simple and past participle of intrigue
1 to interest someone a lot, especially by being strange, unusual, or mysterious:
The exclusive presence of a six-layered cortex in the dorsal pallium of mammals and its enormous expansion during evolution has long intrigued many scientists.
I was particularly intrigued by the commentaries that explored developmental mechanisms that promote the universal n-shaped crying curve.
Unilateral spatial neglect is a disorder that has, for many years, intrigued and frustrated researchers and clinicians working in the area of stroke rehabilitation.
Stimulated and intrigued, they learned to distrust old methods and to fear charges of despotism if they made legitimate use of their powers.
His course somehow intrigued me because it seemed less flaky than a lot of economics.
Students of public opinion have long been intrigued by the concept of political tolerance.
She was puzzled and intrigued, because she had no idea what a phrasal verb might be.
I was intrigued to be able to write a non-traditional research paper, one that allowed some subjectivity.