Allure in a sentence as a noun

"I know really well what the allure of Flash is.

There's no barrier to entry and there's the allure of easy money.

The dark side normalizes and revels in darkness, to shock and allure the audience.

It is then that you are most vulnerable to the allure of exciting new beginnings.

I never saw the allure of staying in someone else's rundown apartment or guest bedroom.

Also the run up of energy and commodity prices has only increased the allure and hold of the Dutch disease in Russia.

Not the "hackers" who are asking for $125k salary...They didn't care about the money, they didn't care about the allure, they didn't care about the status.

I started working for them because I genuinely believed in their mission, and there was a certain allure of a steady paycheck after freelancing for a while.

Allure in a sentence as a verb

I don't know what I am doing, but I suspect this is a lot of the allure - I sit there and poke, and figure out my programming challenge of the day while my fingers are occupied.

I'm not a violin player, but to me the allure of hearing a violinist play on a 300 year old violin isn't that it's the best sounding violin on the planet.

However, it's very easy to succumb to the allure of denouncing anything we don't understand as therefore having no value.

Worship your own body and beauty and sexual allure and you will always feel ugly, and when time and age start showing, you will die a million deaths before they finally plant you.

But the insane complexity of C++ has this addictive allure of making me feel so incredibly competent and important, a bearer of secret knowledge that underpins the world's most important systems.

One of the allures of academia is the prospect of doing fundamental researchIt's also a false allure: the problem is that fundamental research requires funding, and the OP is pointing out that he can't get it.

There are extant letters of Philip to Alexander, of Antipater to Cassander, and of Antigonus to Philip, all three, as we learn, men of the greatest practical wisdom, in which they advise their sons to allure the minds of the multitude in their favor by kindliness of address, and to charm the soldiers by accosting them in a genial way.

Allure definitions

noun

the power to entice or attract through personal charm

See also: allurement temptingness

verb

dispose or incline or entice to; "We were tempted by the delicious-looking food"

See also: tempt