Entice in a sentence as a verb

They entice you with super cheap music.. if you signed up for a monthly subscription.

The NSA guys try to entice him with the opportunity to work on cool math with brilliant people.

"Where is the fun and easy intro to BioChem course so that we can entice more people to become doctors?

He abdicated the project last year, though I still keep hoping that we'll entice him back someday!

The public can also voluntarily send more coins to the bounty address to entice people to unlock it!

Google+ was interesting enough to entice me into trying social networking.

I have never heard a story of Amazon threatening someone to work for them or using physical force to entice them to take a job.

Instead they try to entice you later, once you have actually decided to purchase something, to signup for their loyalty card to gain that additional info.

[2]The obvious question, then, is this: Did the FBI use Sabu to entice Anons into attacking child porn networks, thereby evading the laws against them doing it themselves?

Take advantage of NeXT's easy and powerful OpenStep programming tools to entice a new generation of Mac software developersEspecially true for iOS> 39. Build a laptop that weighs 2 pounds> 50.

"Secondly, and more importantly, the reason the employer is making a counter-offer is not to entice you to stay, but to buy enough time to find someone else -- a loyal and qualified someone else -- to replace you.

Also, ensuring that office remains the de facto business standard for the foreseeable future means that MS will always have that opening to entice people back to the Windows platform, the same way mp3 players enticed people to switch to macs, iphones, and ipads.

Why would they help you get the connections needed to be a founder, when the alternative is that you not get those and never be a competitive threat?Many of these VC-istan firms develop horrible cultures as the engineers realize they won't get the leadership opportunities they were promised, because those are going to go out to entice new hires.

Entice definitions

verb

provoke someone to do something through (often false or exaggerated) promises or persuasion; "He lured me into temptation"

See also: lure tempt