[
UK
/θɹˈɔːl/
]
[ US /ˈθɹɔɫ/ ]
[ US /ˈθɹɔɫ/ ]
NOUN
- someone held in bondage
- the state of being under the control of another person
How To Use thrall In A Sentence
- I stood enthralled, astonished by the vastness and majesty of the cathedral
- Our first reaction is enthralled delight, but then ominous overtones register.
- It's heartening to know that not all Mexicans are in thrall to the mighty Christmas tree and still put up nacimientos in their homes! OK! Now that I know . . . . . .
- Most of us find the oceans enthralling.
- His conceit and awful orange hair will carry on enthralling a worldwide audience.
- Born one minute apart, we were a rambunctious twosome, enthralled with our twinship. Chicken Soup for the Soul: Twins and More
- He appropriated just enough of the rhetoric of each faction to keep them all enthralled and unalienated. The Times Literary Supplement
- An increasingly reclusive figure, he was by this stage plagued by money worries and seemingly in thrall to plastic surgery. The Sun
- I am on the left and in thrall to Karl Marx, Gul tells Sri Lanka's Daily Mirror. Pakistan cricketer calls on Marxist in case for the defence
- A price is paid for all, yet few delivered; the redemption of all consummated, yet few of them redeemed; the judge satisfied, the jailer conquered, and yet the prisoner inthralled! The Death of Death in the Death of Christ