[
UK
/sɪdˈʌktɪv/
]
[ US /sɪˈdəktɪv/ ]
[ US /sɪˈdəktɪv/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- tending to entice into a desired action or state
How To Use seductive In A Sentence
- They were batting their eyelashes a million times a second and showing off their best seductive smiles… yuk!
- They both tried to talk of ordinary things for the few moments before that meal was announced, and then some kind of devilment seemed to come into Amaryllis -- nothing could have been more seductive or alluring than her manner, while keeping to strict convention. The Price of Things
- She greeted me at the door wearing only her bra and knickers, and a seductive smile.
- A gamine ingenue to her sophisticated divorcee, she plays this streetwise waif with the same knowing naivety that made the 12-year-old such a disturbingly seductive assassin's helpmate in her first film, Leon.
- While he radiated innocence and virginity, Siterra radiated seductiveness, wildness, and deadliness.
- But the noose and lifeline metaphors dramatize the in-culture ‘factness’ of much writing, its consequentiality, rather than the seductive pleasures of its speculative realm.
- The legend of Mata Hari is, for sure, the most enduring image of the female spy - the vamp who wheedles state secrets out of men by her seductive charms.
- With her volleys of coloratura and seductive (yet false) warmth, she is a stunner.
- Smoothly steering between R&B and Eurodance, she's breathily seductive on Motivation – by contrast, guest Lil Wayne is positively anaemic – while I'm Dat Chick updates the jumpy minimalism of Destiny's Child's No, No, No. Kelly Rowland: Here I Am – review
- At least Bardem acknowledges that he has a certain seductive intensity. People Magazine Proves What I Knew In My Heart To Be True: Javier Bardem is Hot! | Best Week Ever