luring
English edit
Verb edit
luring
- present participle and gerund of lure
Noun edit
luring (plural lurings)
- allurement
- 1988, Ruth Salvaggio, Enlightened Absence: Neoclassical Configurations of the Feminine:
- Perhaps the most striking instance of this desired appropriation of color, particularly the color that Pope associated with nature and, through nature, with the muse and all her feminine lurings, can be found in Windsor-Forest […]
- 2004, Adam Edwards, Peter Gill, Transnational Organised Crime: Perspectives on Global Security:
- […] the criminals […] carry on with all their endeavours for many months or even years, building up a reputation of invulnerability in the process and thus presenting a bad example to those susceptible to the seemingly profitable lurings of crime.
Anagrams edit
Indonesian edit
Etymology edit
Blend of luar (“outside”) + jaringan (“network”).
Pronunciation edit
Adjective edit
luring
Swedish edit
Noun edit
luring c
- (colloquial) a sneaky, sly fellow
Declension edit
Declension of luring | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
Nominative | luring | luringen | luringar | luringarna |
Genitive | lurings | luringens | luringars | luringarnas |