tempt

/tɛmt/

UK: /tɛmt/

tempt

English Verb Top 11,243
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 0.5s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 0.5s
American (Ryan) (medium)
Male 0.3s
Ad

Definition

To provoke someone to do wrong, especially by promising a reward; to entice.

Etymology

From Middle English tempten, from Old French tempter (French: tenter), from Latin temptare, from tentare (“to handle, touch, try, test, tempt”), frequentative of tendere (“to stretch”). Displaced native English costning (“temptation”).

Example Sentences

  • "She tempted me to eat the apple."
  • "By Heav’ns, ſuch Virtues, join’d with ſuch Succeſs, Diſtract my very Soul: Our Father’s Fortune Wou’d almoſt tempt us to renounce his Precepts."
  • "Eveline Hill, the protagonist of the Dubliners story "Eveline," for example, successfully extricates herself from the confines of her "Eve" name since, like her nameling in the Garden of Eden who was tempted by promises of knowledge, Eveline, too, is tempted: […]"
Ad