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mesmerize
[ mez-muh-rahyz, mes- ]
verb (used with object)
This young pianist has mesmerized audiences with her incredible technique and range of musical expression.
- to hypnotize or put into a trancelike state; cause (someone) to be open to the power of suggestion or unable to act on their own:
According to ancient myth, the song of the sea nymphs mesmerized sailors, drawing them into disastrous waters.
- to cause or compel through fascination or by hypnotizing:
Advertising can easily mesmerize us into thinking that wealth is the same as money and possessions.
In this game scene, the warriors do not know they鈥檝e been mesmerized into the service of the enemy.
mesmerize
/ 藞尘蓻锄尘蓹藢谤补瑟锄 /
verb
- a former word for hypnotize
- to hold (someone) as if spellbound
Derived Forms
- 藞尘别蝉尘别谤藢颈锄别谤, noun
- 藢尘别蝉尘别谤颈藞锄补迟颈辞苍, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 尘别蝉路尘别谤路颈路锄补路迟颈辞苍 [mez-m, uh, -rahy-, zey, -sh, uh, n, mes-], noun
- 尘别蝉路尘别谤路颈锄路别谤 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of mesmerize1
Example Sentences
As Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Jacob deGrom traded zeroes at Globe Life Field in Texas last week, Kershaw sat in the dugout, mesmerized by what he could only describe as an exhibition in pitching excellence.
Max Webster鈥檚 production, which won three Tony Awards for its mesmerizing design, brings audiences along on an adventure that combines the heartfelt wisdom of a classic fable with the splendor of modern stage poetry.
In a post on X, AccuWeather said the mesmerizing blue spiral might have been caused by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
When I got to 鈥淟ast Tango,鈥 it was later, but it mesmerized me because of what they were doing.
Ali had recently beaten Frazier to earn a shot at Foreman, but he was also 32 and no longer the ringmaster whose speed and power mesmerized fans.
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