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    Se·duce
    /səˈdo͞os/

    verb

  2. The meaning of SEDUCE is to persuade to disobedience or disloyalty. How to use seduce in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Seduce.

  3. to persuade or trick someone into doing something by making it very attractive: Nowadays you have to seduce students into learning through colorful graphics or exciting adventure themes. If you seduce someone, you persuade that person to have sex with you.

  4. to persuade or cause someone to do something that they would not usually consider doing by being very attractive and difficult to refuse: I wouldn't normally stay in a hotel like this, but I was seduced by the fabulous location. They were seduced into buy ing the washing machine by the offer of a free flight.

  5. To seduce someone is to make them want to engage in sexual activity with you, especially in a subtle or manipulative way. Seduce is also commonly used in a more general way meaning to tempt or influence someone to do something, especially something bad or something they wouldn’t normally do.

  6. 3 meanings: 1. to persuade to engage in sexual intercourse 2. to lead astray, as from the right action 3. to win over, attract,.... Click for more definitions.

  7. To seduce is to lure or entice, particularly away from obligations or proper behavior. A gorgeous day could seduce you from doing your homework. Seduce means something close to attract, beguile, tempt, and mislead. The word often has romantic overtones, but it doesn't have to: a clever criminal could seduce someone into a life of crime.

  8. Seduce Definition. sĭ-do͝os, -dyo͝os. seduced, seduces, seducing. Meanings. Synonyms. Sentences. Definition Source. Origin. Verb. Filter. verb. seduced, seduces, seducing. To attract or lead (someone) away from proper behavior or thinking. American Heritage. To persuade to do something disloyal, disobedient, etc. Webster's New World.

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