Dazzle in a sentence as a noun

Do we expect government websites to be wow and dazzle us?

I hope Nokia can find its feet again and dazzle us with some amazing phones again.

Yes, we can make certain gene products and achieve simple little results that still dazzle us.

You lose the important signal of audience engagement with your ideas if you dazzle them through charisma.

The rationale is closer to that behind dazzle camouflage, thoughto confuse, rather than to conceal.

It's not enough to dazzle the customer into saying yes - you need to arm them with the tools to convince their boss/accountant/partners that this is the best solution.

Dazzle in a sentence as a verb

"If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with ********".It CAN be a useful tool to deflect and confuse, but sadly I think 99% of the time it's not used intentionally.

I like "3", because my comment here is the third in the thread started by your comment, and I expect my comment to so dazzle readers with its brilliance that nobody else will bother responding.

I wouldn't mind Romney himself: I think he'd be a mediocre President, but Obama hasn't blown me away either and probably wouldn't dazzle much as second terms aren't great usually.

"If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with ********"If you present your paper "Healthy men who engage in a well rounded exercise regimen live longer, healthier lives" everyone is just going to go "well duh."

Sadly, those businesses market to unsophisticated customers on the basis of flash and dazzle, and usually any attempt at user advocacy is met with requests for flash and dazzle.

Dazzle definitions

noun

brightness enough to blind partially and temporarily

verb

to cause someone to lose clear vision, especially from intense light; "She was dazzled by the bright headlights"

See also: bedazzle daze

verb

amaze or bewilder, as with brilliant wit or intellect or skill; "Her arguments dazzled everyone"; "The dancer dazzled the audience with his turns and jumps"