[
UK
/bɪdˈæzəl/
]
VERB
-
to cause someone to lose clear vision, especially from intense light
She was dazzled by the bright headlights
How To Use bedazzle In A Sentence
- Her charm bedazzled the audiences.
- But that's not always really that necessary in order to bedazzle an audience.
- The general public, for whom these essays are also written, should be similarly bedazzled.
- As they came upon the balcony guarded precariously by a short fence of black steel, Tia gazed up at the midnight sky, bedazzled by its sudden beauty.
- Yet I was lost in the haze of the impending battle, my eyes fazed and bedazzled by the brilliant flash of swords and cutlasses.
- What this postcard does first is bedazzle you with the illusion of three-dimensionality.
- Then 4,000 bewigged and bedazzled ticket holders will enter the richly decorated ballrooms, dance floors, and courtyards of the historic building for a wild waltz of well-intentioned decadence.
- At his own risk and peril, it analyzes and digs deep into its own bedazzlement. Les Miserables
- Veronika Part's Odile in Act III of Swan Lake should have been taped (perhaps, fingers crossed, it was) for future broadcast across Martian spacecamps, to show those who left earth behind what bedazzlement looked like before our planet turned completely brown. Of Mice and Me (cont'd): James Wolcott
- We ran them off the park and bedazzled them with one touch passing, scoring four times to their two.