Beguile (verb)
bee-giyl
to charm or divert.
Beguile can also mean “to mislead through trickery or flattery.” Beguile from guile, which can mean “cleverness,” “craftiness,” or “deceptiveness.”. First recorded in English in 1175–1225.
Example sentences
“She was known to beguile men and then rob them of everything they owned.”
Rubric (noun) roo-brik A title, heading, direction, or the like, in a manuscript, book, statute, etc., written or printed in red or otherwise distinguished from the rest of the text.…
Omnibus (noun) om-nee-bus volume a collection of works by one author or several works on a similar topic, reprinted in one volume. / A whole week's television show rounded up…
Charrette (noun) sha-ret a final, intensive effort to finish a project, before a deadline. 1965–70; French: cart, Old French, equivalent to char chariot, wagon ( car 1 ) + -ette…
Stratum (noun) Strah-tum/ strey-tum one of a number of portions or divisions likened to layers or levels.(plural strata) First recorded 1590–1600 and comes from the Latin word strātum, which means…
Appellative (adj) a-pel-a-tiv designative; descriptive. First recorded around 1375–1425 and comes via late Middle English from the Late Latin word appellātīvus. (more…)
Complot (noun) (verb) kom-plot a plot or conspiracy./ To plot together and conspire. C16: from Old French, of unknown origin (more…)
Irenic (adj) ahy-ren-ik tending to promote peace or reconciliation; peaceful or conciliatory. First recorded in 1860–65 and comes from the Greek word eirēnikós, equivalent to eirḗn(ē), “peace.” (more…)
Cacophony (noun) ku-kof-uh-nee harsh or unpleasant discordance of sound; dissonance. First recorded in 1650–60; from New Latin cacophonia, from Greek kakophōnía; equivalent to caco- + -phony (more…)