Attraction
the act, power, or property of .
quality; magnetic charm; fascination; allurement; enticement:
the subtle attraction of her strange personality.
a person or thing that draws, , allures, or entices:
the main attraction was the after-dinner speaker.
a characteristic or quality that provides pleasure; feature:
the chief attractions of the evening were the good drinks and witty conversation.
physics. the electric or magnetic force that acts between oppositely charged bodies, tending to draw them together.
an entertainment offered to the public.
contemporary examples
the final demographic coup for the sunbelt lies in its attraction for families.
forget what the pundits tell you, coastal cities are old news – it’s the sunbelt that’s booming joel kotkin february 28, 2014
while larry, on the other hand, was not especially attracted to andie, he was fully supportive of rachel exploring her attraction.
threesome marriages abby ellin may 6, 2009
i ask them if they are trying to sell this as an attraction.
true life: i’m a part-time ghost hunter christine pelisek september 14, 2013
there was always some attraction to death, his designs were sometimes dehumanized.
alexander mcqueen’s demons jacob bernstein february 15, 2010
clearly the attraction was the nine-year-old girl in her one-piece.
a nation of onlookers: india’s violence against women and america’s guns dilip d’souza december 21, 2012
historical examples
let us go straight to the attraction, and not be acting contrary to the laws of nature.
the funny philosophers george yellott
you will be the only attraction at this performance, and i have only you to count on for the receipts.
my double life sarah bernhardt
now, after a few days’ absence, he found a flourishing village, and one by no means devoid of interest and attraction.
red hunters and the animal people charles a. eastman
the weight of a load depends upon the attraction of the earth.
pax vobisc-m henry drummond
by making two small sewing-needle magnets, you can easily study the laws of attraction and repulsion.
things a boy should know about electricity thomas m. (thomas matthew) st. john
noun
the act, power, or quality of attracting
a person or thing that attracts or is intended to attract
a force by which one object attracts another, such as the gravitational or electrostatic force
a change in the form of one linguistic element caused by the proximity of another element
n.
late 14c., from french attraction, from latin attractionem (nominative attractio) “a drawing together,” noun of action from past participle stem of attrahere (see attract). originally a medical word, “absorption by the body;” meaning “action of drawing to” is from 1540s (again medical); extended to magnetic, then figuratively to personal (c.1600) qualities. meaning “a thing which draws a crowd, interesting or amusing exhibition” is from 1829, a sense that developed in english and soon transferred to the french equivalent of the word.
attraction at·trac·tion (ə-trāk’shən)
n.
a force acting mutually between particles of matter to draw them together and to resist their separation.
Read Also:
- Attraction sphere
noun another name for astrosphere (sense 2) attraction sphere n. see astrosphere.
- Attractive nuisance
law. a doctrine of tort law under which a person who creates or permits to exist on his or her land a dangerous condition attractive to children, as an unfenced swimming pool, is liable for their resulting injuries, even though the injured are tresp-ssers. a hazardous condition or object to which this doctrine is applicable.
- Attractor
a person or thing that . physics. a state or behavior toward which a dynamic system tends to evolve, represented as a point or orbit in the system’s phase sp-ce. historical examples “there, we can see what they’re doing now,” and duquesne anch-r-d the vessel with an attractor. skylark three edward elmer smith shall one […]
- Attrib.
. . . abbreviation attribute attributive attribute attributed to attributive attributively
- Attributed
to regard as resulting from a specified cause; consider as caused by something indicated (usually followed by to): she attributed his bad temper to ill health. to consider as a quality or characteristic of the person, thing, group, etc., indicated: he attributed intelligence to his colleagues. to consider as made by the one indicated, especially […]