Synonym: appeal, attract, entice, interest, invite, lure, seduce, tantalize, titillate. Similar words: attempt, caveat emptor, exempt, preempt, temple, exempt from, temporal, temporary. Meaning: [tempt] v. 1. dispose or incline or entice to 2. provoke someone to do something through (often false or exaggerated) promises or persuasion 3. give rise to a desire by being attractive or inviting 4. induce into action by using one's charm 5. try to seduce 6. try presumptuously.
Random good picture Not show
31. They had apparently felt as if a burden had been lifted from them and why tempt fate by attempting to get her back?
32. All manner of villain tries to tempt him, divert him, or separate him from his small savings.
33. They're angry the motor racing team hasn't been able to improve on the reportedly £7million offer to tempt him back.
34. Satan's bride was washed back from the sea to tempt the men of the land, to betray them.
35. The Parisian shops have things to tempt even the strongest of wills.
36. The Knicks are hoping a huge salary bonus will tempt Riley to return as head coach.
37. Dantley thinks his new recipes will tempt his customers into trying rabbit.
38. She was terrified of flying. The relative advantages of air travel didn't tempt her at all.
38. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and make good sentences.
39. Along the way, devils battle the angels to try to tempt the shepherds from their journey.
40. The Robe had been shot in Cinemascope in order to tempt the new television viewers back into the cinemas.
41. And there's no shortage of fake goods on display to tempt shoppers with tight budgets.
42. It is very important that you don't allow impatience to tempt you into over-exposure and sunburn.
43. The ads tempt children to smoke - it's a forbidden fruit.
44. She's tried to tempt her back into the woods, but with little success.
45. In order to tempt investors, governments have therefore taken to offering sweeteners with their privatization offers.
46. A pail lifted, still and brimming - mirror To tempt a first star to a tremor.
47. Few cultures have been so willing to tempt the gods.
48. The large coiled springs and unfamiliar machinery tempt one to try to commandeer the thing and ride it into another era.
49. Recipes provided on the packages of certain staples sometimes tempt a semiliterate person to prepare a meal her children have not tasted.
50. Another spectre of his too-vivid memory rose up to tempt him.
51. It was a work designed to catch the eye, to tempt the curious and to help with the identification of rarities.
52. The Department of Industry is trying to tempt more companies to enter this area.
53. Without wishing to tempt providence in any way, we appear to have got away lighting in so far as Winter is concerned.
54. A bigger difficulty is that the premature announcement of merger talks may tempt other firms into bidding for one or both.
55. As a hermit living in a cave, he refused the flock of naked women sent to tempt him.
56. In some of their light and not-so-light aircraft seats are added in a manner guaranteed to tempt the irresponsible.
57. Burton was hurling himself on the course most likely to tempt and test him to the limit.
58. Then they didn't have enough financial clout to tempt Stuart Pearce from Nottingham Forest.
59. Would she not tempt the best lord in the land to run away with her?
60. Almost instinctively, people worried that so outstanding a year might tempt Helen to switch at once to the professional circuit.
More similar words: attempt, caveat emptor, exempt, preempt, temple, exempt from, temporal, temporary, temperature, contemplate, contretemps, tempestuous, contemporary, prompt, symptom, bumptious, sumptuous, assumption, stem, item, consumption, presumptuous, system, empire, employ, emperor, empower, empathy, emphasis, episteme.