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"temptingly" Definitions
  1. in a way that is attractive, and makes people want to have something, do something, etc.

39 Sentences With "temptingly"

How to use temptingly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "temptingly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "temptingly". Mastering all the usages of "temptingly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Take a look at this sexy little stalk of daikon, limbs temptingly askance.
The conclusion of such a still-completely-hypothetical line of reasoning is temptingly obvious.
But it might be time to think your takeaway, despite how temptingly convenient it is.
These are so temptingly aromatic, your mouth will be watering hours before they're actually done.
Whatever the future holds for Argentina's foreign currency bonds, their yields look temptingly juicy today.
I did, even if it drove the dogs mad, hanging temptingly just behind the screen in the unlit fireplace.
And second, a p-value is a temptingly easy figure to rely on when deciding whether research is valuable.
This fish-eat-fish explanation is a temptingly Machiavellian one, he added, but exactly how the "woman in red" effect occurs remains unknown.
No matter how temptingly you email me, I'm not going to think, oh go on then, just one more toilet seat, I'll treat myself.
Letter To the Editor: The romance and history of apples was temptingly described in "In Search of an Ancient Harvest" (news article, May 30).
RECIPE: Thai Fried Chicken Bites Start brining today, and you'll have these wildly addictive, temptingly spicy, utterly enjoyable chicken bites ready to fry on Friday.
There is a temptingly simple explanation for this embrace of Mr Trump: that the Republican Party is a consciously racist project, from top to bottom.
There are well-known names like Nextbase and Garmin that offer value and high-end dash cams, as well as smaller firms making temptingly-cheap alternatives.
Absolut Vodka, known since the 1980s for its distinctive photography in advertising, has also succumbed, commissioning GIFs of the fruits that flavor its booze, twisting temptingly.
Investors were optimistic, so much so that, in 2013, they snapped up $850m of bonds issued by a state-owned tuna-fishing company, with temptingly high yields.
Elsewhere in Harlem, a two-bedroom in a small, renovated condo was listed at the temptingly low price of $550,000, with monthly charges in the mid-$400s.
As temptingly simple as the whole "praise effort, not ability" concept seemed, there are no shortcuts to the growth mind-set, not for our children — or for ourselves.
Democratic Republic of Congo's reserves, however, are temptingly rich and include copper and cobalt, needed for an expected upturn in demand for battery vehicles, which gives the government bargaining power.
The far-off lights of Jaffa — a city that Palestinians from the West Bank are not allowed to enter — beckoned so temptingly that they decided to walk all the way there.
She knows too well the divide between conventionally feminine behavior (sewing culottes for her granddaughter, or cooking a pot of Irish stew) and what lies temptingly, and often punishingly, on the other side.
You're searching for an Uber or Lyft on the respective ride-hailing app and you see a car icon crawling nearby ... but even though it's temptingly close, that doesn't mean you'll be matched with that car.
I'd taken enough of Hammargren's time, however, and maybe it was better to view the collection as the beautifully messy forest this man's unique life had created, rather than focus too much on temptingly bizarre trees.
This puts us, the Halloween celebrating public, in a particularly challenging situation: the holiday is not on a weekend—which would make it easy to celebrate—and it's temptingly close to the weekend after, which is in November.
The walls were free of decorations or art; the only flourishes were a pile of Italian fashion magazines beside the bed, an enormous framed mirror on one wall, and a tray of minibar treats temptingly arranged on the desk.
The bar was previously installed at Brooklyn Wayfarers (alas, no touching the temptingly tactile pool table at this iteration) and is presented here by Mackin Projects, with events featuring queer and transgender artists programmed throughout the weekend thanks to Pulse's Perspectives program.
Offered in a range of brilliant carats and colors, including white, yellow and brown (plus one that morphed according to the light), they were laid out so temptingly, either loose or in simple ring settings, it was hard not to reach out and touch.
Try firing a gun into a cave, selling bootleg dentures, sending a scab through the mail or cutting a dollar bill in half: all federal crimes for which you can technically be punished but probably won't be, as Mike Chase's "How to Become a Federal Criminal" temptingly explains.
Instead, we saw scores of presentations on expensive medications for blood sugar, obesity and liver problems, as well as new medical procedures, including that stomach-draining system, temptingly named AspireAssist, and another involving "mucosal resurfacing" of the digestive tract by burning the inside of the duodenum with a hot balloon.
Opening with a close-up of a houndstooth vinyl miniskirt, black fishnets, and sunglasses temptingly dangling in the hand of a passerby, the film introduces Wren (nailed by newbie Susan Berman), a seeming 180 to sheepish small-town Wanda: all loud-mouth scrap, angry elbows, and nimble scarlet high-tops.
Each dish in Sherwood's homemade feasts looks like it's out of a vintage Betty Crocker book, the kind of decadent dessert you might find at a 1970s house party, albeit with ingredients specific to certain animals' diets: jello mold-shapes topped with tiny fish, a fish head temptingly displayed on a bed of carefully positioned shrimp.
The group wander through the wooded wilderness and reach a locked gate at the ha-ha. To please Maria, Mr Rushworth returns to the house to fetch the key. The dialogue is full of subtle innuendo. Henry says temptingly to Maria, "You have a very smiling scene before you".
Vicki Anderson, author of The Dime Novel in Children's Literature, writes that toy books were both temptingly colourful and not instructive.Anderson, p. 46 The books were inexpensive and often were reprints and condensed versions of existing stories such as fairy tales, which were commonly reprinted as toy books, as were books such as Defoe's Robinson Crusoe.
Ross, Josephine. Jane Austen: A Companion, ch. 4 Thistle Publishing. Kindle Edition. Illicit misconduct and sexual temptation are suggested by Austen from the moment the young people reach a door, ‘temptingly open on a flight of steps which led immediately to... all the sweets of pleasure-grounds, [and] as by one impulse, one wish for air and liberty, all walked out’.
Illicit misconduct and sexual temptation are suggested by Austen from the moment the young people reach a door of the house, ‘temptingly open on a flight of steps which led immediately to... all the sweets of pleasure-grounds, [and] as by one impulse, one wish for air and liberty, all walked out’.Byrne (2017) ch. 9, Kindle ed. loc. 3518 They soon find themselves in the wooded area known as the wilderness.
The relationship between Carossa's four part autobiography (Eine Kindheit, Verwandlung einer Jugend, Das Jahr der schönen Täuschungen, and Der Tag des jungen Arztes) and Goethe's Dichtung und Wahrheit is much more subtle than that between Werther and Doktor Bürger. Doctor Carossa had already by this time published three other works: Stella Mystica, Gedichte, and a fifteen-page lyrical pamphlet titled Ostern. The success of Eine Kindheit rekindled Doctor Carossa's enthusiasm. Again, as in 1908, a completely literary career hung temptingly before his eyes.
It was set above a ridge of cave dwellings, high above the town, about 15 km to the east of the Sakya Khorzhak Monastery which has survived, and been restored. In 1841, General Zorawar Singh, the commander-in-chief of the Dogra forces, after conquering almost all of Ladakh and much of Western Tibet, including Mt. Kailash, and lakes Mansarowar and Rakas Tal, and all the territory from Ladakh to the Mayum Pass, east of Mansarowar, from where the road lead temptingly on to Shigatse and Lhasa, backed by a garrison he had stationed at the strategically important Shepeling dzong. He was, however, killed the next year fighting a large Tibetan force, bringing to an end Gulab Singh's dream of an extensive Dogra empire including large sections of Tibet.Ladkah: Crossroads of High Asia. 2nd edition, pp. 84-85.
When the film was released, The New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther gave the picture a negative review, writing: > "There is reasonable ground for suspicion that the people who made The > Unsuspected thought that they were fashioning another Laura, popular mystery > of a few years back... But, beyond a brisk flurry of excitement and > wickedness at the start, it bears little showmanly resemblance to that > previous top-drawer effort in this line... (T)he yarn gets away temptingly. > Once launched, however, it starts leaking, pulling apart at the seams, and > generally foundering in a welter of obvious contrivances and clichés... > Claude Rains is intriguing as the fashionable radio ghoul and Michael North, > a new young actor, looks good as the lad who 'breaks' the case. However, the > rest of the performers... are as patly artificial as the plot."Crowther, > Bosley.
Aurora Avenue (U.S. Route 99) was once a bustling commercial thoroughfare and the main route into Seattle until I-5 bypassed this main street in 1968, sending the neighbourhood into decline and driving prices at a strip of twenty motels in one section of town to the point where they would become a temptingly-inexpensive base of operations for drug dealers and street prostitution, much to the dismay of local residents, businesses and neighbourhood-watch volunteers. Like other municipalities, Seattle initially adopted a nuisance abatement strategy of attempting to shut down the most problematic motels under pretexts such as public health and fire safety violations or using taxation laws. In 2009, the city went further by adopting a "Chronic Nuisance Properties" ordinance penalising owners of businesses whose clientele had brought crime into a neighbourhood (as measured by the number of calls for service to police per 90-day or one-year period for an establishment) or allowing the city to revoke business licences and shut down a business entirely.
In: The German Quarterly 66 (1993), no. 4, pp. 467–476. The cycle depicts the self- determination of a subject who retains the ability to reflect because he is not engulfed by dreams. The realms of dream, death, and nature do not fulfil their promise, and the traveller ultimately rejects “Schein” (semblance) for “Sein” (actual being), or the imagined future for the real present. “As Dorschel points out, the wanderer actively denies the value of dreaming in ‘Im Dorfe’ (‘Was will ich unter den Schläfern säumen?’ [‘What do I want to waste my time among those who are asleep?’] [...]), and [...] death eludes him. This is not merely chance, however, for when ‘Der Lindenbaum’ calls him temptingly back with the promise of eternal rest, he actively chooses to keep walking away from its lure. Dorschel aligns the wanderer with Kant's enlightened subject who sets off on an ‘Ausgang [. . .] aus seiner selbstverschuldeten Unmündigkeit’ (‘emergence [...] from his self-imposed immaturity’), avoiding ‘die Wege, / Wo die andren Wandrer gehn’ [‘paths / where other wanderers walk’] (‘Der Wegweiser’ [...]) as he charts his own path.”Joanna Neilly, ‘Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann’. In: Publications of the English Goethe Society 88 (2019), no.

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