Intrigue in a sentence as a noun

The video is enough to intrigue me, but not enough to get me to buy.

The intrigue is interesting, but it doesn't live up to the hype of the headline.

The main intrigue of the tournament is the fight between Stockfish and Komodo.

It's either that or sit on co-op boards, which are so full of mean-spirited intrigue that even Cthulhu can't stand those people.

The drama of intrigue, revenge, and defeating enemies to reign supreme is the appeal.

There's so much intrigue, and at times you really feel like you're in on something, part of this crazy, wide world filled with wonders and horrors.

And it conjures up images of political intrigue, heated power struggles, and corporate backstabbing.

Intrigue in a sentence as a verb

It looks like he kept his head down and continued to produce while looking for a way to promote his work, then correctly ascertained that the sheer quantity of work would intrigue people.

I mean, can you even still remember that rush of intrigue and anticipation you get when your application refuses to work on two of the twelve servers it was deployed to?

Visits to Luna, Mars, asteroid mining colonies, deep space science labs, political intrigue from Earth, the companies that own colonies, immigration rights, etc.

There's nothing stopping men from mastering intrigue, it's just very destructive, much more so than competitiveness and dominance, even fistfights will damage the group less than constant shifting and mind games.

Hollingsworth notes in Londongrad that the oligarchs he studies became rich not by creating new wealth but rather by insider political intrigue and exploiting the weakness of the rule of law. Arkady Gaydamak, a Russian-Israeli oilman and financier, explained his elite view of accumulating wealth to me in 2005.

It may give us a voyeuristic fascination on something that is depicted as an internal intrigue within a prominent up-and-coming startup but this is fundamentally company confidential information that is not capable of being aired publicly without significant distortion.

Intrigue definitions

noun

a crafty and involved plot to achieve your (usually sinister) ends

See also: machination

noun

a clandestine love affair

verb

cause to be interested or curious

See also: fascinate

verb

form intrigues (for) in an underhand manner

See also: scheme connive