Appealing in a sentence as an adjective

Chomsky is just appealing to our own biases.

We have to get out to see. Climbing to FL390 takes a lot of time, descending from it does as well, otherwise people generally find it rather un-appealing.

While that certainly does seem appealing, zombie projects can have serious impact elsewhere in the company.

Aside from the fact that I'd rather be using Linux any day, hands-down, the computer just feels more physically appealing in itself.

My question remains - why do you want to try appealing to a group of people to whom Facebook is "the internet" and who do everything through Facebook?

Musk's inspirational projects seems much more appealing by comparison.

In that scenario a strong international condemnation of torture suddenly looks way more appealing.

Doing this may seem more appealing to someone who is interested primarily in computational efficiency.

We try to strike > a balance between the different and changing views of web development > the same way we strike a balance between appealing to weekend warriors > and top-100 trafficed sites.

I think the fundamental problem is that companies want a "Sr. Software Engineer" with >7 years of development and >4 years of development in their particular language, who also is young enough to think that "Nerf guns" and "xbox's" [sic] are an appealing "Benefit" and that aren't going to ask anywhere near $115k a year.

There are lots of problems, and if someone who really understood what large-program developers really care about were to step in and develop a new system on Linux, it could be really appealing.

It's less appealing when you realise that there's probably a miniscule fraction of WhatsApp users that don't have a Facebook account.> WhatsApp will remain autonomous and operate independently.

Appealing definitions

adjective

able to attract interest or draw favorable attention; "He added an appealing and memorable figure to popular American mythology"- Vincent Starrett; "an appealing sense of humor"; "the idea of having enough money to retire at fifty is very appealing"

adjective

(of characters in literature or drama) evoking empathic or sympathetic feelings; "the sympathetic characters in the play"

See also: sympathetic likeable likable