Captivating in a sentence as an adjective

Agree with others here, a very captivating read.

And the soundwalls lining the surface parts of the railway line aren't that captivating either.

He's a captivating speaker -- his was easily the best talk I've ever attended.

It's a testament to Duhigg's work that there are many pieces of it that by themselves could make for captivating posts.

They aren't exciting, they aren't captivating, and the media knows this well.

It was captivating and it's what gave me the real push towards actually learning engineering.

"The Socratic method really is much more interesting and captivating for students.

The slight possibility that the plane has actually landed makes it extremely captivating.

Ignoring for the sake of argument the tragedy of hundreds of people getting murdered / kidnapped, this is the most captivating news event we've had in a while.

Just a suggestion: a landing page should immediately show some captivating examples telling me why I should be interested.

Amazingly the "twist" doesn't appear until after around 4300 words -- which were themselves captivating even without yet encountering the twist!

Imagine a Flickr where instead of wading through hundreds of redundant, poorly-curated groups to find something captivating, you find photographers whose work you enjoy and easily follow them.

The combat and physics are really excellent, and the backstory and aesthetic are captivating as ****, but it falls short of that escapist 'real place' feeling for me because if it were real you would be playing some sort of slave-pilot lashed permanently to the controls of their spaceship.

"Not only does he make no offering of a "secret to success", but in reality says:'theres no way to explain how the company that has done no PR, no marketing and is still operating on an invite-only basis is captivating so much of the conversation'It's the old bait-and-switch article title.

No need to test whether our eyes can perceive colours on a canvas!I am sorry, Mr. deGrasse Tyson, but humans are more than just efficient, self-improving robots and our most human moments were and are to be found in play and in otherwise completely "useless" activities like art, music, sports or record-chasing which do nothing but making us and maybe others feel good or thrilled and captivating people's attention for a moment.

Captivating definitions

adjective

capturing interest as if by a spell; "bewitching smile"; "Roosevelt was a captivating speaker"; "enchanting music"; "an enthralling book"; "antique papers of entrancing design"; "a fascinating woman"

See also: bewitching enchanting enthralling entrancing fascinating