To attract, arouse and hold attention and interest, as by charm or beauty.
1That were as impossible as for light to be enamored of dark-
2He left her at the end of this interview violently enamored.
3He had been enamored of this beauty for months and months.
4She seems nearly all her life to have been enamored of this experience.
5But Red Plume continues to be enamored of the instrument.
6What were his ideals of manhood but battling with windmills or being enamored of a myth?
7Bud knew that he was like a gray and inconspicuous moth enamored of a splendidly winged butterfly.
8My father, too, enamored of the superior quality of oil produced, purveyed for his vats with diligence and zeal.
9There is nothing like being enamored of accuracy, being grounded in thoroughness as a life-principle, of always striving for excellence.
10An imagination enamored of the melodies of the antique muse would have immediately taken her for the nymph of that brook.
11"Insufferable enough to try to make the Draught of Enamor?"
12Persecution with all its hardships, in comparison with the Indulgence, was a paradise while the love of Jesus Christ enamored the soul.
13CONSERVATIVE, n. A statesman who is enamored of existing evils, as distinguished from the Liberal, who wishes to replace them with others.
14It behooveth the loved ones of God to be enamored of one another and to sacrifice themselves for their fellow-workers in the Cause.
15Espinosa and that he was enamored by the bewitching beauty of the dark-eyed sister of Espinosa and they were engaged to be married.
16Her husband was dead; Helen was carried away by a man devotedly enamored of her; and most probably was at that time his wife.