0 to persuade someone to do something by offering them something pleasant -- 誘惑;誘使;引誘
The adverts entice the customer into buying things they don't really want. 廣告誘使顧客購買他們並不真正需要的東西。
People are being enticed away from the profession by higher salaries elsewhere. 別處更加豐厚的薪水誘使人們辭職另謀高就。
[ + to infinitive ] A smell of coffee in the doorway enticed people to enter the shop. 門口飄出的咖啡香味使得人們聞香駐足,進入店內。
Credible apologies signal government commitment to redress economic conditions and may entice continued labour quiescence and production investment.
The utilisation of whole-group listening tasks as a straightforward means of investigating baseline competencies is an enticing one.
Developers appear inclined to entice the buyer with a sleek kitchen and oak floor, at the expense of craftsmanship and longterm maintenance.
Female shoppers, enticed by new metropolitan retail development, carved out a space for middle- and upper-class women in the public spaces of the city.
Opera is most critically enticing when it slides between mirroring and marking gender and sexuality.
It provides a broad overview of gerontology research to the undergraduate or to the uninitiated, and may entice one or two to read further.
Whereas our forebears spoke of engaging people's interests and motivating, inducing, enticing, or encouraging people to act in certain ways, we speak of their incentives.
They are enticed by the promises of nationalist leaders who promote a substantive version of democracy that emphasizes the socio-economic elevation of the poor.