To attract, arouse and hold attention and interest, as by charm or beauty.
Sinônimos
Examples for "catch"
Examples for "catch"
1Keeping track of these health statistics can help catch heart problems early.
2However there are better times of the year to catch this phenomenon.
3In addition, a catch-up programme targets schoolgirls reaching 18 years of age.
4Metica said 'now,' great one, and I'll catch it if you're late.
5Baker said the health system was doing its best to catch up.
1They were trying to gain entrance by any means necessary, including violence.
2Note the entrance; a vertical hole in the snow in the foreground
3It was the official entrance to Leinster House used for state visits.
4However, the rear entrance to the centre is another story this week.
5He's right here, just inside the entrance, blocking the way, Zelandoni said.
1The state capture inquiry so far He will continue testifying on Tuesday.
2Today is a hugely significant day in the history of state capture.
3It's not been a very good week at the state capture inquiry.
4The electronic health record was used to capture demographic and pathologic data.
5For instance, state capture doesn't start with one family or two families.
1The charm of the SEA Games has diminished significantly in recent years.
2The course oozes style, class and charm in a truly French way.
3But this great superstitious fear was, however, part of Benedict's eternal charm.
4One learns the charm of the lone trail in the Canadian bush.
5Yet the charm of these quirky homes from home is simply irresistible.
1Until midnight the lawyer held all in the town in a trance.
2Deep trance-like sleep and lethargy were the first signs of the problem.
3Seeing the direction of my gaze, Mandor remarked, Very light trance state.
4The doctor in the meanwhile sat in a sort of delightful trance.
5The Cornal stood listening to the story as one in a trance.
1Our aim is to fascinate visitors, involving them in the artistic process.
2Deirdre Gogarty can hardly remember a time when boxing didn't fascinate her.
3The passage between the house and the chapel seemed to fascinate Larry.
4There was no doubt that in some way she did fascinate him.
5The bare outlines around Oldport sometimes dismay the stranger, but soon fascinate.
1And with many other pleasant tales did they beguile the hours away.
2There was at first little in the situation to beguile her spirits.
3In these tones did the magician, bawling for old lamps, beguile Aladdin.
4I procured some books and music, to beguile the tedious solitary days.
5Occasionally a male bird sets himself to beguile the time with song.
1The travails of the storied playboy prime minister never fail to captivate.
2A pretty face, or good figure, may captivate; but fine clothes, never.
3May none of those unruly passions ever captivate any of my audience.
4She wanted every day to enchant, to captivate, to drive men crazy.
5She exerted herself all through the Stearns' dinner to captivate Dave Darrin.
1So you must visit the newspapers and magazines and enchant the types.
2She wanted every day to enchant, to captivate, to drive men crazy.
3And didn't he enchant the wagon wheels so they'd find the road?
4Italian, as we know it today, was meant to enchant, charm and beguile.
5Just as Greece's odyssey enchanted Europe, surely hurling requires a new romance.
1Have a care of the governess, Lucia, or she will bewitch him.
2This charming creature- Itellyou she is irresistible-hervery oddities bewitch me.
3Fairies don't bewitch, and witches lose their power to cast spells.
4She had held a silver instrument, which she had used to bewitch Tobias.
5Nay, it is as well that I do not; she might bewitch me.
1And who possesses a perfect and enamour'd body?
2Me, I confess, that earth can enamour yet.
5Why doth my face so enamour thee that thou turnest not to the fair garden which beneath the rays of Christ is blossoming?
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.