0 present participle of lure
1 to persuade someone to do something or go somewhere by offering them something exciting:
To effect the breakthroughs that are so important in cosmic history, it took a lot of luring!
Finally, another implication of claim 2(c) is that, when private investment is subject to expropriation risk, luring investors with high returns may be dangerous.
Conspiratorial theories were the rage as arsenal managers blamed the immoral practices of other industrialists for luring their workers.
These spaces flow in an intriguing way, luring us on; it is also a tour de force of construction technique, managing to extract a double curvature from flat sheet-rock panels.
For a tiny fragment of the cosmic story this is occurring as a response to and a luring of beings that are self-conscious and, to a significant extent, consciously self-determining.
A critical aspect of retiree attraction programmes is luring the ' right ' sort of seniors, meaning the affluent and comfortable middle class with the appropriate cultural cachet.
Stroll through any shopping mall, supermarket, or car lot and observe the enormous energy devoted to luring the customer to choose one item among a fabulous array of competing items.
I am congratulating myself on succeeding in luring them into this discussion.